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Rice | 2014

The roots of future rice harvests.

Nourollah Ahmadi; Alain Audebert; Malcolm J. Bennett; Anthony Bishopp; Antonio Costa de Oliveira; Brigitte Courtois; Abadala Gamby Diédhiou; Anne Dievart; Pascal Gantet; Alain Ghesquière; Emmanuel Guiderdoni; Amelia Henry; Yoshiaki Inukai; Leon V. Kochian; Laurent Laplaze; Mikaël Lucas; Doan Trung Luu; Baboucarr Manneh; Xiaorong Mo; Raveendran Muthurajan; Christophe Périn; Adam H. Price; S. Robin; Hervé Sentenac; Bassirou Sine; Yusaku Uga; Anne-Aliénor Véry; Mathieu Wissuwa; Ping Wu; Jian Xu

Rice production faces the challenge to be enhanced by 50% by year 2030 to meet the growth of the population in rice-eating countries. Whereas yield of cereal crops tend to reach plateaus and a yield is likely to be deeply affected by climate instability and resource scarcity in the coming decades, building rice cultivars harboring root systems that can maintain performance by capturing water and nutrient resources unevenly distributed is a major breeding target. Taking advantage of gathering a community of rice root biologists in a Global Rice Science Partnership workshop held in Montpellier, France, we present here the recent progresses accomplished in this area and focal points where an international network of laboratories should direct their efforts.


Plant Science | 2012

Agro-morphological characterization of a population of introgression lines derived from crosses between IR 64 (Oryza sativa indica) and TOG 5681 (Oryza glaberrima) for drought tolerance

Roland Bocco; Mathias Lorieux; P.A. Seck; Koichi Futakuchi; Baboucarr Manneh; H. Baimey; Marie-Noëlle Ndjiondjop

The study evaluated effects of drought on some agro-morphological traits of 60 rice genotypes comprising 54 introgression lines with their parents, IR 64 (Oryza sativa) and TOG 5681 (Oryza glaberrima) and four NERICA-L varieties developed from the same parents for comparison. The genotypes were subjected either to full irrigation from sowing to maturity (control) or to 21-day drought applied by stopping irrigation from the 45th day after sowing (DAS) onward (drought) in the dry seasons of 2006 and 2007-2008. Plant height, spikelet fertility, grain yield and leaf area at harvesting were consistently reduced by drought in both seasons. Values of leaf temperature, leaf rolling, leaf tip drying, leaf blast, days from seeding to flowering and maturity were higher under drought. The results on SPAD and number of tillers were not consistent. Significant relationship (P<0.05) was observed between all traits evaluated and grain yield under drought. Introgression lines, SEN-L13-2, MPL-15-3, SEN-L10-1, SEN-L26-3 and SEN-L21-2 showed significantly higher yield than the highest yield NERICA-L variety (all of them had higher yield than the parents). Among them, SEN-L13-2 showed the lowest yield loss by drought and MPL-15-3 had high yield potential and considerably low yield loss by drought.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2017

Crop-model assisted phenomics and genome-wide association study for climate adaptation of indica rice. 2. Thermal stress and spikelet sterility

Michaël Dingkuhn; Richard Pasco; Julie Pasuquin; Jean Damo; Jean-Christophe Soulie; Louis-Marie Raboin; Julie Dusserre; Abdoulaye Sow; Baboucarr Manneh; Suchit Shrestha; Tobias Kretzschmar

Low night and high day temperatures during sensitive reproductive stages cause spikelet sterility in rice. Phenotyping of tolerance traits in the field is difficult because of temporal interactions with phenology and organ temperature differing from ambient. Physiological models can be used to separate these effects. A 203-accession indica rice diversity panel was phenotyped for sterility in ten environments in Senegal and Madagascar and climate data were recorded. Here we report on sterility responses while a companion study reported on phenology. The objectives were to improve the RIDEV model of rice thermal sterility, to estimate response traits by fitting model parameters, and to link the response traits to genomic regions through genome-wide association studies (GWAS). RIDEV captured 64% of variation of sterility when cold acclimation during vegetative stage was simulated, but only 38% when it was not. The RIDEV parameters gave more and stronger quantitative trait loci (QTLs) than index variables derived more directly from observation. The 15 QTLs identified at P<1 × 10-5 (33 at P<1 × 10-4) were related to sterility effects of heat, cold, cold acclimation, or unexplained causes (baseline sterility). Nine annotated genes were found on average within the 50% linkage disequilibrium (LD) region. Among them, one to five plausible candidate genes per QTL were identified based on known expression profiles (organ, stage, stress factors) and function. Meiosis-, development- and flowering-related genes were frequent, as well a stress signaling kinases and transcription factors. Putative epigenetic factors such as DNA methylases or histone-related genes were frequent in cold-acclimation QTLs, and positive-effect alleles were frequent in cold-tolerant highland rice from Madagascar. The results indicate that epigenetic control of acclimation may be important in indica rice genotypes adapted to cool environments.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2017

Crop-model assisted phenomics and genome-wide association study for climate adaptation of indica rice. 1. Phenology

Michaël Dingkuhn; Richard Pasco; Julie Pasuquin; Jean Damo; Jean-Christophe Soulie; Louis-Marie Raboin; Julie Dusserre; Abdoulaye Sow; Baboucarr Manneh; Suchit Shrestha; Alpha Bocar Balde; Tobias Kretzschmar

Phenology and time of flowering are crucial determinants of rice adaptation to climate variation. A previous study characterized flowering responses of 203 diverse indica rices (the ORYTAGE panel) to ten environments in Senegal (six sowing dates) and Madagascar (two years and two altitudes) under irrigation in the field. This study used the physiological phenology model RIDEV V2 to heuristically estimate component traits of flowering such as cardinal temperatures (base temperature (Tbase) and optimum temperature), basic vegetative phase, photoperiod sensitivity and cold acclimation, and to conduct a genome-wide association study for these traits using 16 232 anonymous single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers. The RIDEV model after genotypic parameter optimization explained 96% of variation in time to flowering for Senegal alone and 91% for Senegal and Madagascar combined. The latter was improved to 94% by including an acclimation parameter reducing Tbase when the crop experienced low temperatures during early vegetative development. Eighteen significant (P<1.0 × 10-5) quantitative trait loci (QTLs) were identified, namely ten for RIDEV parameters and eight for climatic index variables (difference in time to flowering between key environments). Co-localization of QTLs for different traits were rare. RIDEV parameters gave QTLs that were mostly more significant and distinct from QTLs for index variables. Candidate genes were investigated within the estimated 50% linkage disequilibrium regions of 39 kB. In addition to several known flowering network genes, they included genes related to thermal stress adaptation and epigenetic control mechanisms. The peak SNP for a QTL for the crop parameter Tbase (P=2.0 × 10-7) was located within HD3a, a florigen that was recently identified as implicated in flowering under cool conditions.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Field Trials Reveal Ecotype-Specific Responses to Mycorrhizal Inoculation in Rice.

Abdala G. Diédhiou; F. K. Mbaye; D. Mbodj; Mathieu Ndigue Faye; Sarah Pignoly; Ibrahima Ndoye; K. Djaman; S. Gaye; Aboubacry Kane; Laurent Laplaze; Baboucarr Manneh; Antony Champion

The overuse of agricultural chemicals such as fertilizer and pesticides aimed at increasing crop yield results in environmental damage, particularly in the Sahelian zone where soils are fragile. Crop inoculation with beneficial soil microbes appears as a good alternative for reducing agricultural chemical needs, especially for small farmers. This, however, requires selecting optimal combinations of crop varieties and beneficial microbes tested in field conditions. In this study, we investigated the response of rice plants to inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) and plant growth promoting bacteria (PGPB) under screenhouse and field conditions in two consecutive seasons in Senegal. Evaluation of single and mixed inoculations with AMF and PGPB was conducted on rice (Oryza sativa) variety Sahel 202, on sterile soil under screenhouse conditions. We observed that inoculated plants, especially plants treated with AMF, grew taller, matured earlier and had higher grain yield than the non-inoculated plants. Mixed inoculation trials with two AMF strains were then conducted under irrigated field conditions with four O. sativa varieties, two O. glaberrima varieties and two interspecific NERICA varieties, belonging to 3 ecotypes (upland, irrigated, and rainfed lowland). We observed that the upland varieties had the best responses to inoculation, especially with regards to grain yield, harvest index and spikelet fertility. These results show the potential of using AMF to improve rice production with less chemical fertilizers and present new opportunities for the genetic improvement in rice to transfer the ability of forming beneficial rice-microbe associations into high yielding varieties in order to increase further rice yield potentials.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2018

Assessment of Genetic Variation and Population Structure of Diverse Rice Genotypes Adapted to Lowland and Upland Ecologies in Africa Using SNPs

Marie Noelle Ndjiondjop; Kassa Semagn; Mounirou Sow; Baboucarr Manneh; Arnaud C. Gouda; Sèdjro B. Kpeki; Esther Pegalepo; Peterson Wambugu; Moussa Sie; Marilyn L. Warburton

Using interspecific crosses involving Oryza glaberrima Steud. as donor and O. sativa L. as recurrent parents, rice breeders at the Africa Rice Center developed several ‘New Rice for Africa (NERICA)’ improved varieties. A smaller number of interspecific and intraspecific varieties have also been released as ‘Advanced Rice for Africa (ARICA)’. The objective of the present study was to investigate the genetic variation, relatedness, and population structure of 330 widely used rice genotypes in Africa using DArTseq-based single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). A sample of 11 ARICAs, 85 NERICAs, 62 O. sativa spp. japonica, and 172 O. sativa spp. indica genotypes were genotyped with 27,560 SNPs using diversity array technology (DArT)-based sequencing (DArTseq) platform. Nearly 66% of the SNPs were polymorphic, of which 15,020 SNPs were mapped to the 12 rice chromosomes. Genetic distance between pairs of genotypes that belong to indica, japonica, ARICA, and NERICA varied from 0.016 to 0.623, from 0.020 to 0.692, from 0.075 to 0.763, and from 0.014 to 0.644, respectively. The proportion of pairs of genotypes with genetic distance > 0.400 was the largest within NERICAs (35.1% of the pairs) followed by ARICAs (18.2%), japonica (17.4%), and indica (5.6%). We found one pair of japonica, 11 pairs of indica, and 35 pairs of NERICA genotypes differing by <2% of the total scored alleles, which was due to 26 pairs of genotypes with identical pedigrees. Cluster analysis, principal component analysis, and the model-based population structure analysis all revealed two distinct groups corresponding to the lowland (primarily indica and lowland NERICAs) and upland (japonica and upland NERICAs) growing ecologies. Most of the interspecific lowland NERICAs formed a sub-group, likely caused by differences in the O. glaberrima genome as compared with the indica genotypes. Analysis of molecular variance revealed very great genetic differentiation (FST = 0.688) between the lowland and upland ecologies, and 31.2% of variation attributable to differences within cluster groups. About 8% (1,197 of 15,020) of the 15,020 SNPs were significantly (P < 0.05) different between the lowland and upland ecologies and formed contrasting haplotypes that could clearly discriminate lowland from upland genotypes. This is the first study using high density markers that characterized NERICA and ARICA varieties in comparison with indica and japonica varieties widely used in Africa, which could aid rice breeders on parent selection for developing new improved rice germplasm.


The South African Journal of Plant and Soil | 2016

Agronomic performance of early segregating generations of rice under salt stress in Niger

Oumarou Souleymane; Baboucarr Manneh; Eric Nartey; Kwadwo Ofori; Eric Danquah

Salinity is a major abiotic constraint that retrains rice production worldwide. The development and release of rice cultivars with improved performance in saline environments is essential to fight against this scourge. Hence this study was carried out to evaluate segregating populations of rice in Niger where salinity is a major constraint. Thus 120 F3 families derived from a diallel cross of four parents were evaluated in salt-affected farmers fields at two sites. The experimental design was an alpha lattice 25*5 with three replications and two sites. Data on the cycle, height, tiller number, panicle number, panicle weight, grain weight, and yield were recorded. Data were analysed using SAS 9.2 and least significant difference was used for means separation. Yield potential under salt stress varied significantly among F3 families ranging from 2.52 to 4.17 t ha−1. Correlation analysis among traits showed that yield was significantly and positively associated with height, tiller and panicle number, and panicle weight. The 20 best-performing families with a high selection index were selected for advancement for farmers adoption.


Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies | 2015

Evaluation of sixteen reference evapotranspiration methods under sahelian conditions in the Senegal River Valley

Koffi Djaman; Alpha Bocar Balde; Abdoulaye Sow; Bertrand Muller; Suat Irmak; Mamadou K. N’Diaye; Baboucarr Manneh; Yonnelle Dea Moukoumbi; Koichi Futakuchi; Kazuki Saito


Field Crops Research | 2015

Improving yield potential of tropical rice: achieved levels and perspectives through improved ideotypes

Michael Dingkuhn; Maria Rebecca C Laza; Uttam Kumar; Kharla V.S. Mendez; Bertrand C. Y. Collard; Krishna S.V. Jagadish; Rakesh Kumar Singh; T.F. Padolina; Myrna Malabayabas; Edgar Torres; Maria Camila Rebolledo; Baboucarr Manneh; Abdoulaye Sow


Plant Science | 2010

Drought resistance in an interspecific backcross population of rice (Oryza spp.) derived from the cross WAB56-104 (O. sativa) × CG14 (O. glaberrima)

Marie Noelle Ndjiondjop; Baboucarr Manneh; Mamadou Cissoko; Nani Khady Drame; Romain Glele Kakai; Roland Bocco; Hugues Baimey; Marco C.S. Wopereis

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Oumarou Souleymane

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Folkard Asch

University of Hohenheim

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Michael Dingkuhn

International Rice Research Institute

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