GreenRice: Sustainable and environmental friendly rice cultivation systems in Europe

Under the leadership of CIRAD, Italian, Spanish and French research centers developed the GreenRice project, which aims at testing a rice irrigation system (AWD) that alternates between wetting and drying periods to save water and limit greenhouse gas emissions.

Date de début de projet

01/01/2015

Date de fin du projet

31/12/2018

Objectives

To design and test an alternative water-saving production system for rice in Europe ensuring sufficient productivity while reducing the negative impacts for the environment.

Location

Pô plain, Italy ; Rhône delta, France ; Ebro delta, Spain

Description

In Europe, rice (467 000 ha) is gown under permanently flooded (PF) conditions using irrigation waters of major rivers. Climate change, which has led to a greater fluctuation in river flows, is a major challenge to rice production systems, which depend on large and consistent water supplies. Rice yields under existing production practices are therefore threatened by scarcer water availability. In addition, PF rice fields emit greenhouse gases (GHG), such as methane (CH4), that have a strong global warming potential. Alternate wetting and drying (AWD) is a system in which irrigation is applied to obtain 2 to 5 cm of field water depth, and then turned off. After a short period (normally 2 to 7 days), when the field has dried out, water is re-applied. Preliminary studies suggest that AWD can reduce water use by up to 30 %, with no net loss in yield provided varieties well adapted to AWD are used, whileCH4 emissions can be reduced by up to 48 %. However, uncertainties still remain as to the impacts of AWDS on GHG fluxes (e.g. CO2, N2O) and plant-mutualist and plant-pest interactions, which may influence the overall efficacy and viability of this new system. To close these critical knowledge gaps, GreenRice aims to test AWDS in Italy, Spain and France, in regions that are representative of the diversity of European rice growing areas, notably in deltaic areas where rice systems and natural protected wetlands are interdependent. The project evaluate the agronomic and environmental consequences of shifting from a PF to an AWD system, focusing on rice yields, water consumption, soil salinization, plant-soil-microbial interactions and GHG dynamics. The project identify varieties that maintain their productivity under AWDS through genome-wide association mapping of a large panel of temperate varieties, using genomic selection to predict the values of additional breeding lines. The project investigate traits determining adaptation to AWDS, such as root development, AM colonisation, salt tolerance and resistance to nematodes; and the role of AM symbiosis in alleviating the impacts of biotic stress. The role of plant functional traits and the soil microbial activity in modulating C, N and GHG fluxes are investigated in both field-based and controlled environment studies. The results obtained are disseminated to local stakeholders (primarily farmers and natural park authorities) and to the scientific community.

Partnership

CIRAD, France ; CREA Vercelli, Italy, CRAG Barcelona, Spain ; University of Aberdeen, UK ; IRTA Spain; Universita degli Studi di Torino, Italy ; Centre Français du Riz, France

Team

Development and adaptation of rice (DAR)

Fundings

FACCE-ERA-NET+ on Climate Smart Agriculture

Keywords

Rice, irrigation, association genetics