Systems-based rice improvement approaches for sustainable food and nutritional security.

Department of Biotechnology, School of Life Sciences, Central University of Rajasthan, Ajmer, 305817, Rajasthan, India. vivek.verma@curaj.ac.in. School of Biological Sciences, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, 639798, Republic of Singapore. Strategic Innovation Platform, International Rice Research Institute, DAPO 7777, Metro Manila, Philippines. Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, National University of Singapore, Singapore, 117543, Republic of Singapore. prakash.kumar@nus.edu.sg.

Plant cell reports. 2021;(11):2021-2036
Full text from:

Other resources

Abstract

An integrated research approach to ensure sustainable rice yield increase of a crop grown by 25% of the world's farmers in 10% of cropland is essential for global food security. Rice, being a global staple crop, feeds about 56% of the world population and sustains 40% of the world's poor. At ~ $200 billion, it also accounts for 13% of the annual crop value. With hunger and malnutrition rampant among the poor, rice research for development is unique in global food and nutrition security. A systems-based, sustainable increase in rice quantity and quality is imperative for environmental and biodiversity benefits. Upstream 'discovery' through biotechnology, midstream 'development' through breeding and agronomy, downstream 'dissemination and deployment' must be 'demand-driven' for 'distinct socio-economic transformational impacts'. Local agro-ecology and livelihood nexus must drive the research agenda for targeted benefits. This necessitates sustained long-term investments by government, non-government and private sectors to secure the future food, nutrition, environment, prosperity and equity status.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Review

Metadata