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2009
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- 1 killed, 3 injured in car blast in NW Pakistan
- S. Korea's rocket moved to launch pad
- Angkor 333-2010: Cambodian home-made car
- Two French men held on underage sex charges in Cam...
- Much more to beauty than 'perfect' T&A
- Planned dams in Cambodia ‘could cause poverty to s...
- Thai Military Leaders Scheduled for Visit
- The Number of Boeng Kak Lake Residents Protesting ...
- Family of Slain Union Leader Welcomes Court Move
- Doctor Discusses Risk of Strokes
- Govt puts torch to seized drugs
- Minnesota Pagoda Prepares for Buddha Relics
- Cambodian-Thai talks address malaria cases
- Rare wildlife product seizures spike
- 'I betrayed friends,' says S-21 chief
- 60kg of heroin seized in Jakarta on local tip
- Ministry of Health officials leave for intl confer...
- Vendors take rent grievance to PM
- Some flee riverbank erosion
- Govt denies patrols in disputed waters
- 4 loggers return after crackdown
- Cambodia expects to join international rubber group
- Club owner, 2 managers are charged on sex law
- Exports of garments to Japan rise 98.1pc
- Singapore group eyes investments
- CEO Talk: Troubles loom, but AMK is golden
- Pumped-up Polo takes fourth in bodybuilding compet...
- National teams slug it out at Baribo ballpark
- Decorated athletes return
- Brief: All eyes on the top five
- Police Blotter: 21 Aug 2009
- 'Balibo' cover-up: a film’s travesty of omissions
- Volleyball league set for more action
- An elephant's tale
- Cambodia to recall some troops at border: PM
- Indian security force arrests man with arms at Ind...
- Indonesia becomes promising market for Singaporean...
- 2 more deaths related to influenza A/H1N1 reported...
- Number of A/H1N1 flu cases up to 98 in Bangladesh
- Terror group responsible for Wednesday's attacks i...
- Myanmar hails achievements at ASENA Para Sports meet
- Obama praises Afghan presidential election importa...
- Lao Police Arrest Five Cambodians [$15,000 ransom ...
- Another useless meeting with Thai military leaders...
- Cooperative agreement for Thai-Cambodian border
- Hamill tells his story to children of Cambodia
- The Disappeared by Kim Echlin
- The Ministry of Interior Plans to Sue Chea Mony of...
- Repairing a Shattered Image
- Taiwan begins 3-day mourning period after typhoon
- Cambodia's 'Holy Cow' ceremony
- Minnesota Pagoda Prepares for Buddha Relics
- Thai Military Leaders Scheduled for Visit
- Cambodians unsure tribunals will heal wounds of ma...
- Cambodian village worships cow with reptilian skin
- Cambodian officials tipped off Indonesia to 60kg h...
- Govt to sue over murder claims
- Up in smoke
- Vendors take rent grievance to PM
- Rare wildlife product seizures spike
- Club owner, 2 managers are charged on sex law
- Some flee riverbank erosion
- CEO Talk: Troubles loom, but AMK is golden
- Exports of garments to Japan rise 98.1pc
- Cambodia expects to join international rubber group
- Decorated athletes return
- Pumped-up Polo takes fourth in bodybuilding compet...
- Singapore group eyes investments
- Police Blotter: 21 Aug 2009
- National teams slug it out at Baribo ballpark
- Volleyball league set for more action
- Brief: All eyes on the top five
- Cambodian Villagers mourns ‘holy cow’
- An elephant's tale
- 'Balibo' cover-up: a film’s travesty of omissions
- Paddling to the beat of a new drum: Dragon boat ra...
- Parents, Schools Make Plans for Swine Flu
- he Village Pig Project Announces Launch of New Web...
- Luxury Travel Promotes the Best of the Best of Cam...
- Acid Attack Film Debuts in Portland
- Head judge calls for "Fair and just" verdict for p...
- Cambodia mourns 'holy cow'
- Over 100,000 pills of drug substances destroyed in...
- Duch Put Friends in Prison, Too
- Cambodia offers farmers fund to fight against drought
- Duch and the Phung Ton family: an impossible meeting
- Q+A-Will Cambodia's economic woes affect stability?
- Scientists develop high-yield deep water rice
By ERIC TALMADGE (AP)
TOKYO — A team of Japanese scientists has discovered genes that enable rice to survive high water, providing hope for better rice production in lowland areas that are affected by flooding.
The team, primarily from the University of Nagoya, reported their findings in Thursday's issue of Nature, the science magazine.
The genes, called SNORKEL genes, help rice grow longer stems to deal with higher water levels. Deep-water rice generally produces lower-yield rice plants. But the researchers report they have succeeded in introducing the genes to rice varieties that are higher-yield.
According to the report, as water levels rise, accumulation of the plant hormone ethylene activates the SNORKEL genes, making stem growth more rapid. When the researchers introduced the genes into rice that does not normally survive in deep water, they were able to rescue the plants from drowning.
Motoyuki Ashikari, who headed the project, said his team is hoping to use the gene on long grain rice widely used in Southeast Asia to help stabilize production in flood-prone areas where rice with the flood-resistant gene is low in production — about one-third to one-quarter that of regular rice.
"Scientifically, the gene that we found is rare but clear proof of a biological ability to adapt to a harsh environment," he said. "It's a genetic strategy specifically to survive flooding."
Ashikari said his team already successfully tested the gene on a Japanese "Japonica" rice, and his team now plans to create a flood-resistant long grain rice in three to four years for use in countries such as Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Cambodia.
High water levels in paddies can be a serious problem. In some areas, rains can cause water levels to rise dangerously high during the growing season and flash flooding can fully submerge plants for days or even weeks.
Rice is a staple food for billions, and while productivity has increased dramatically since the 1960s, yields must be doubled to meet projected requirements by 2050. More than 30 percent of Asian and 40 percent of African rice acreage is cultivated in either lowland paddies or deepwater paddies.
Laurentius A. C. J. Voesenek, at the Institute of Environmental Biology, Utrecht University, who was not part of the research team, said the study is significant because high-yield rice varieties cannot survive extremes of inundation.
"The introduction of (these genes) into high-yielding varieties, using advanced breeding strategies, promises to improve the quality and quantity of rice produced in marginal farmlands," he said in a review of the paper, also published in Nature.
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