Yesterday's News Archive

Custom Search

News Finder

Enter topic, city or zip or try our Advanced Search
 
DSC00733 - Nature - Clouds
DSC00733 - Nature - Clouds
Nature - Clouds Photos - DSC00733
World Photos - www.worldinphotos.com             World Photos - www.worldinphotos.com
 
Featured Services at www.worldofnews.com
Stock Quotes
Stock Quotes www.stockquoteusa.com
Eg. MSFT, GOOG, YHOO
Symbol Lookup
Jobs and careers - www.ejobwizard.com
Jobs, Careers www.jobsncareers.com
Over 500 job sites
WHAT

Job title, keywords or company name
WHERE(optional)

city, state or zip
Coupons, online coupons, internet coupons, discount coupons
Coupons, online coupons,
internet coupons,
discount coupons

Local classifieds, Local jobs, Local Business
Local classifieds,
Local jobs,
Local Business

Real Estate Web Design, Hosting, and Promotion with The Real Estate Listing Manager
Real Estate Web Design,
Hosting, and Promotion.

Web design, Custom WebSites, Content Manager, eCommerce, SEO.
Web design, Custom WebSites,
Content Manager,
eCommerce, SEO.

Indian news, headlines - www.indiasnews.com
Indian News

India, India News, Hotels, Tourism - www.india.tm
India, India News, Hotels, Tourism
Online Profiles, Personal Profiles Create Your Search Engine Profile - www.whataboutu.com
Online Profiles, Personal Profiles Create Your Search Engine Profile
People Profiles, Celebrity Profiles Create Your Profile - www.peopleandprofiles.com
People Profiles, Celebrity Profiles Create Your Profile
Local Merchants Stay Local Deal Global with MerchantSpan.com - www.merchantspan.com
Local Merchants Stay Local Deal Global with MerchantSpan.com

 
Top Stories

"Waterproof" rice to tackle crop loss in India
Nov 22, 2008 03:00
Washington, Nov 22 ANI: "Waterproof" versions of popular varieties of rice, which can withstand 2 weeks of complete submergence, have successfully passed tests in farmers' fields in India and Bangladesh, and can tackle the problem of major crop losses due to flooding. The flood-tolerant versions of the "mega-varieties" of rice, which are high-yielding varieties popular with both farmers and consumers that are grown over huge areas across Asia, are effectively identical to their susceptible counterparts, but recover after severe flooding to yield well.Several of these varieties are now close to official release by national and state seed certification agencies in India and Bangladesh, where farmers suffer major crop losses because of flooding of up to 4 million tons of rice per year. This is enough rice to feed 30 million people.The new varieties were made possible following the identification of a single gene that is responsible for most of the submergence tolerance. Thirteen years ago, Dr. David Mackill, senior rice breeder at the International Rice Research Institute IRRI, then at the University of California UC at Davis, and Kenong Xu, his graduate student, pinpointed the gene in a low-yielding traditional Indian rice variety known to withstand flooding. Xu subsequently worked as a postdoctoral fellow in the lab of Pamela Ronald, a UC Davis professor, and they isolated the specific gene, called Sub1A, and demonstrated that it confers tolerance to normally intolerant rice plants. Dr. Ronald's team showed that the gene is switched on when the plants are submerged. "Sub1A effectively makes the plant dormant during submergence, allowing it to conserve energy until the floodwaters recede," according to Dr. Julia Bailey-Serres, a geneticist from UC Riverside, who is leading the work to determine exactly how Sub1A confers flood tolerance. Typically, rice plants will extend the length of their leaves and stem in an attempt to escape submergence. The Sub1A gene is an evolutionarily new gene in rice found in only a small proportion of the rice varieties originating from eastern India and Sri Lanka. The activation of this gene under submergence counteracts the escape strategy."The potential for impact is huge. "In Bangladesh, for example, 20 percent of the rice land is flood prone and the country typically suffers several major floods each year," said Dr. Mackill. "Submergence-tolerant varieties could make major inroads into Bangladesh's annual rice shortfall and substantially reduce its import needs," he added. ANI



News related by topic - Top Stories:
Bristol stadium plans submitted - BBC
Historic watermill wheel restored - BBC
Body of man found by hillwalker - BBC
Police chief shortlist revealed - BBC
Owen close to shock Man Utd move - BBC
State Park potluck - SFGate


News related by source - aniin.com:
Congress opens internet kiosks, launches e-campaign in Gujarat - aniin.com
India will retake second place with series win over England - aniin.com
Brangelina want to settle down in New Orleans - aniin.com
Lindsay Lohan 'nuzzles' Sean Penn at a private party - aniin.com
Kate Hudson keen to work with mum Goldie Hawn - aniin.com
Britney's mum feels she is responsible for her daughter's breakdown - aniin.com



 
casino
News, World News, News Headlines, Top Stories, Breaking News, Globals News at www.worldofnews.com
Indian News, News from India, India News, Indian News Headlines, Indian breaking news, News, World news at www.indiasnews.com
UK News, British News, English News, News from UK, UK headlines, UK top stores, England News, Britain news, world news at www.worldofnews.co.uk
Home | About Us | Get News Feeds | Advertise Here | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Site Map