Performance, Economics and Potential Impact of Perennial Rice PR23 Relative to Annual Rice Cultivars at Multiple Locations in Yunnan Province of China

Perennial grain crops hold the promise of stabilizing fragile lands, while contributing grain and grazing in mixed farming systems. Recently, perennial rice was reported to successfully survive, regrow, and yield across a diverse range of environments in Southern China and Laos, with perennial rice...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sustainability 2018-04, Vol.10 (4), p.1086
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Guangfu, Qin, Shiwen, Zhang, Shilai, Cai, Xiaolin, Wu, Shukang, Dao, Jinrong, Zhang, Jing, Huang, Liyu, Harnpichitvitaya, Dome, Wade, Len, Hu, Fengyi
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container_end_page
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1086
container_title Sustainability
container_volume 10
creator Huang, Guangfu
Qin, Shiwen
Zhang, Shilai
Cai, Xiaolin
Wu, Shukang
Dao, Jinrong
Zhang, Jing
Huang, Liyu
Harnpichitvitaya, Dome
Wade, Len
Hu, Fengyi
description Perennial grain crops hold the promise of stabilizing fragile lands, while contributing grain and grazing in mixed farming systems. Recently, perennial rice was reported to successfully survive, regrow, and yield across a diverse range of environments in Southern China and Laos, with perennial rice PR23 being identified as a prime candidate for release to farmers. This paper reports the evaluation of PR23 for release, by (1) comparing its survival, regrowth, performance, and adaptation with preferred annual rices across nine ecological regions in southern Yunnan Province of China; (2) examining the economic costs and benefits of perennial versus annual rice there; and (3) discussing the evidence for the release of PR23 as a broadly adapted and acceptable cultivar for farmers. Overall, the grain yield of PR23 was similar to those of the preferred annual rice cultivars RD23 and HXR7, but the economic analysis indicated substantial labour savings for farmers by growing the perennial instead of the annual. PR23 was comparable to the annuals in phenology, plant height, grain yield, and grain size, and was acceptable in grain and cooking quality. Farmers were keen to grow it because of reduced costs and especially savings in labour. PR23 is proposed for release to farmers because of its comparable grain yields to annual rices, its acceptable grain and milling quality, its cost and labour savings, and the likely benefits to soil stability and ecological sustainability, along with more flexible farming systems.
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source MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Agricultural economics
Cooking
Cost control
Crop yield
Cultivars
Economic analysis
Economic impact
Farmers
Farming
Grain crops
Impact analysis
Oryza
Perennial crops
Regrowth
Rice
Soil stability
Sustainability
Sustainable agriculture
title Performance, Economics and Potential Impact of Perennial Rice PR23 Relative to Annual Rice Cultivars at Multiple Locations in Yunnan Province of China
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