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SRI-UPDATE
#7 - September 2006
(click
here for subscription information)
To:
SRI-UPDATE-L@cornell.edu (SRI-UPDATE-L)
From: Norman Uphoff
Subject: SRI-UPDATE-L #7 (September 2006)
Dear SRI-Update-L subscriber,
This is the seventh in the SRI UPDATE series that is being sent
out 7-8 times per year. Enhanced
versions of these e-updates
and archives are available on the SRI website.
This url also contains information on subscriptions for other
SRI groups in other countries.
The numbered listing of sections below provides an overview of the contents of
this Update, to let you know what items are included. To subscribe to the interactive
SRI discussion list, instead of this announcement-only list, see http://ciifad.cornell.edu/sri/listservs/index.html#rice.)
-Norman Uphoff
for CIIFAD SRI Group
++++++++++++++++
1. 2nd International Rice Congress
will have SRI presentations
2. Contacts expanding with Japanese rice science
community
3. Presentation on SRI to ICID meeting in Malaysia
4. Government support for SRI extension in Cambodia
5. SRI training
starting across the Philippines
6. Philippine National Irrigation
Administration (NIA) manager promotes SRI
7. Productivity benefits of 1 plant per hill vs. 3 plants per hill documented by researchers
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1. 2nd INTERNATIONAL RICE CONGRESS WILL HAVE SRI PRESENTATIONS
Colleagues from a number of countries have reported that their
proposed posters on SRI have been accepted for display at the International
Rice Congress being held in New Delhi, October 9-13: Bhuban Barah
from the National Center for Agricultural Economics and Policy
Research in India on the comparative evaluations of SRI being done
across a number of Indian states; Abha Mishra from the Asian Institute
of Technology in Bangkok reporting on experimental work at AIT
and farmer-participatory research in Cambodia; Karma Llendrup from
Sherubutse College in Bhutan on his introductory trials of SRI
in that country; and Rajendra Uprety from the District Agricultural
Development Office in Biratnagar, Nepal, on SRI experience in Morang
District.
There may be other SRI colleagues attending the Congress that we
at Cornell have not been informed about. Dr. Tao Longxing from
the China National Rice Research Institute in Hangzhou, who did
some of the first work on phenotypical differences in SRI rice
plants, will be attending. Norman Uphoff will make a formal presentation
on SRI in a panel on water policy and use. He will be staying at
the Asoka Hotel, the Congress venue, so messages can be left for
him at the desk there if anyone attending the Congress wants to
have discussions or informal meetings on SRI.
2. CONTACTS EXPANDING WITH JAPANESE RICE SCIENCE COMMUNITY
During his home leave in August, Shuichi Sato, project director
for Nippon Koei in Eastern Indonesia, met with Dr. Takeshi Horie,
director of the National Agricultural Research Organization (NARO)
in Japan, and also Yasuhiro Tsujimoto, Horie's PhD student who
has been doing thesis research in Madagascar on SRI in cooperation
with Association Tefy Saina. Tsujimoto's findings on the soils
that produce very high SRI yields should be of wide interest. In
Update #1, we noted Prof. Horie's paper assessing SRI in light
of Japanese rice science research findings, presented to the 4th
International Soil Science Conference in 2004 and subsequently
published in /Plant Production Sciences/, 8: 257-272 (http://www.regional.org.au/au/cs/2004/symposia/2/4/1869_horiet.htm).
Sato-san then made a presentation on SRI to agriculture faculty
of the University of Tokyo, and it was decided to send a team of
9 researchers, from a full professor to four post-graduate students,
to visit SRI fields in Lombok in October. On August 29-September
1, after Sato-san had returned to Indonesia, Dr. Yamaji from University
of Tokyo visited Sulawesi for a second visit to observe SRI plots.
Linkages with Japanese rice scientists are expanding and deepening,
a very welcome development.
3. PRESENTATION ON SRI TO ICID MEETING IN MALAYSIA
On September 14, Shuichi Sato made a presentation on SRI to an
international workshop on Water-Saving Production in Rice Paddy
Cultivation being held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. This was part
of the 57th Meeting of the International Commission on Irrigation
and Drainage (ICID). While agronomists have been most concerned
with SRI yield effects, other professions such as civil engineering
are particularly interested in water management/saving aspects
with SRI. Thanks to WWF's program in India, biologists and ecologists
are starting to get engaged with environmental impacts. We have
yet to see any systematic interest in assessing economic profitability
and factor productivity effects of SRI.
4. GOVERNMENT SUPPORT FOR SRI EXTENSION IN CAMBODIA
With support from GTZ and Oxfam, the Cambodian Center for Study
and Development in Agriculture (CEDAC) and the Department of Agriculture
and Land Improvement of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and
Fisheries (MAFF) organized a national workshop on System of Rice
Intensification (SRI) held 7 August at MAFF headquarters. The 165
participants included officials from all Provincial Departments
of Agriculture, farmers, researchers, representatives of NGOs,
and international organizations. The workshop reviewed the progress
of SRI in Cambodia, sharing experiences and lessons learned, and
promoting wider dissemination of SRI in Cambodia.
The Minister of Agriculture attended both the opening and the closing
sessions of the workshop. In his speech, he urged all government
officials to widely promote SRI in Cambodia, especially to promote
SRI without using agro-chemicals. He also encouraged all directors
of Provincial Agriculture Departments to pay more attention to
learning from farmers and to documenting farmer innovations, which
he characterized as important assets for the country's agricultural
development. The Minister also emphasized the need to conserve
traditional rice varieties as they are "our national treasure."
On 10 August, the Minister organized a study trip for around 200
people from 11 provinces to visit SRI farmers in Tramkok district,
Takeo province. This is where CEDAC and MAFF, with funding support
from the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), are working
together to improve the situation of small-farm households through
ecological agriculture. At the end of the study tour, the Minister
instructed all directors of Provincial Departments to make sure
that in each commune there should be at least one SRI demonstration.
He strongly recommended the farmer-to-farmer extension approach,
especially farmers visiting farmers, to promote SRI.
5. SRI TRAINING STARTING ACROSS
THE PHILIPPINES
SRI-Pilipinas, a consortium of farmers' groups, civil society organizations,
academics and government researchers promoting the System of Rice
Intensification in the Philippines, has launched a nationwide training
program on SRI principles and practices, funded by the Department
of Agriculture. The initial events --one-day training sessions
that include hands-on experience in transplanting very young rice
seedlings -- will be conducted in 90% of Philippine provinces,
all those that produce >20,000 tons of rough rice a year. Each
session will include about 25 participants drawn from farmers'
groups, local governments, agriculture technicians and other interested
individuals, persons who can spread that they have learned to others.
Five trainings have been completed already, in Quezon province
on Luzon and in Iloilo, Bohol, Leyte and Biliran provinces in the
Visayas. SRI-Pilipinas coordinator Roberto Verzola hopes to cover
at least two provinces in each of the country's 16 regions by the
next planting season, with the rest of the targetted provinces
to be covered in the next season.
6. PHILIPPINE NATIONAL IRRIGATION ADMINISTRATION (NIA) MANAGER
PROMOTES SRI PRACTICES
When Engr. Bong Salazar, at the time a Regional Irrigation Manager
in eastern Mindanao, first learned about SRI in 2003, he incorporated
its practices in his own on-farm experiments and harvested a yield
of 138 cavans (6.9 tons) from his one-hectare field. The crop cuts
were witnessed by Department of Agriculture's Undersecretary Edmund
Sana. The next year, Salazar got 178 cavans (8.9 tons) per ha with
SRI methods from a two-hectare field, and in 2005, from the same
field he got a yield of 192 cavans (9.6 tons) per ha.
Initially, Salazar called his methods "the Salazar System of Rice
Intensification (SSRI)," but he now calls it the "Sustainable System
of Irrigated Agriculture" (SSIA). The system involves transplanting
8-10 day-old seedlings; single seedlings per hill and wide spacing,
at least 25 cm; flooding the field for 3 days and then keeping
it drained for 7 days; controlling weeds with a mechanical weeder;
and use of organic fertilizers plus his own formulation of organic
pesticides.
Salazar was subsequently appointed as head of NIA's regional office
in Northern Mindanao, and he was then brought to NIA headquarters
to serve as Assistant Administrator. According to Salazar, SSIA
will help NIA solve two major problems: its inability to service
all irrigable areas, and low collection rates. With water savings
of 40-60%, Salazar says that SSIA will enable NIA to service more
farmers with the same infrastructure and same amount of water available;
and by helping farmers raise their incomes, NIA should be able
to improve its collection efficiency, especially if farmers appreciate
NIA's role in bringing SSIA benefits to them. Today, Salazar gets
invited to many parts of the country to talk about SSIA and about
the improved yields and reduced costs that it achieves.
7. PRODUCTIVITY BENEFITS OF 1 PLANT PER HILL VS. 3 PLANTS PER HILL
DOCUMENTED BY RESEARCHERS
An article in /_Field Crops Research_/ (2006, vol. 26, pp. 113-124)
by Yumiko San-Oh and colleagues -- "The effect of planting pattern
on the rate of photosynthesis and related processes during ripening
in rice plants"-- should be of interest to anyone interested in
(or skeptical about) SRI. Here is the abstract:
• Rice plants (/Oryaz sativa/ L.) planted in such
a manner that each hill contains one plant (pattern I) produce
more dry matter than plants planted such that each hill contains
(pattern III), particularly during the ripening stage. As one of
the causal factors of the difference in dry matter production,
the rate of photosynthesis and related physiological processes
were investigated in direct-down rice plants cultivated in a submerged
paddy field after heading. [Note: spacing was varied so that the
total number of plants per m2 was the same, ca. 152 in all trials]
• The rate of photosynthesis was similar at full heading
for plants from patterns I and III. When the rate of photosynthesis
decreased during the period of ripening, plants from pattern I
maintained higher rates of leaf photosynthesis than plants from
pattern III. This was primarily related to the maintenance of higher
leaf photosynthetic activity in pattern I plants.
• Plants from pattern I maintained higher leaf levels
of Rubisco and N during the ripening stage than plants from pattern
III. Close linear relationships were observed between the levels
of Rubisco and rate of photosynthesis as well as between the levels
of N and Rubisco.
• N accumulation in aboveground parts and partitioning
of N to leaves maintained significantly higher levels during the
ripening stage in plants from pattern I than plants from pattern
III. This results in the higher leaf levels of N in pattern I plants
during the ripening stage.
• Plants from pattern I had significantly greater
number of crown roots and root length densities, and maintained
relatively higher cytokinin [phytohormone] fluxes from roots to
shoot during the ripening stage than plants from pattern III. The
free cytokinin, trans-zeatin, was responsible for the larger total
flux for cytokinins in pattern I plants. These root characteristics
may also contribute to the maintenance of the higher levels of
Rubisco and N in leave in plants from pattern I.
Note that these evaluations were done with rice plants grown under
submerged conditions. One might expect that with aerobic soil conditions,
the responses of pattern-I rice plants would be even more pronounced.
But this cannot be known until the same trials and measurements
are done with SRI methods. In any case, this research indicates
that other things being equal, single seedlings will give more
yield per unit area than seedlings grown close together in clumps,
a key recommendation of SRI.
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