Abstract

BackgroundDespite the critical role rice breeders play to ensure food security, there is a lack of information regarding their current socio-economic characteristics, constraints and attitudes towards technology adoption. Some key concepts like budget, experience, local ecosystems, level of education and even main breeding method have hardly been surveyed in the past. This not only clouds any policy making regarding scientists in national agricultural research programmes, it also makes it difficult to assess the needs and problems local rice breeders face around the world.MethodsA global online survey was conducted reaching 189 rice breeders from 51 rice-growing countries around the world. The questionnaire was structured according to an adoption framework we proposed from the literature. We specifically investigated their attitudes to adopting an alternative breeding method called rapid generation advance (RGA) (also known as single seed descent). To provide some historical perspective, we compare our results with those reported by Hargrove (Rice breeders in Asia: a ten-country survey of their backgrounds, attitudes, and use of genetic materials, 1978), the only published survey on rice breeders.ResultsOverall, rice breeders are highly educated and have a long experience with their main breeding method. However, a gender gap with respect to education seems to persist. Large variation in resources (staff, land and budget) was observed with a small number of resource-rich institutes and a large number of resource-poor institutes. Most rice breeders are focused on breeding for irrigated conditions. Most breeders have a relatively high degree of risk taking and time preference towards shorter breeding cycles. The majority of breeders are aware of RGA and its benefits with more than half having observed RGA in practice. Finally, breeders are confident in the RGA technique and estimate its resource savings to be substantial.ConclusionsBreeders’ willingness to adopt RGA was remarkably high. Surprisingly, adoption of RGA remains low (4% as main method). This may suggest that the benefits of using the RGA method still need to be further demonstrated in rice breeding. Our results could be useful to develop targeted extension material or interventions for implementing new technologies, which could be useful to high-level agricultural managers, international research centres and aid agencies.

Highlights

  • Despite the critical role rice breeders play to ensure food security, there is a lack of information regarding their current socio-economic characteristics, constraints and attitudes towards technology adoption

  • To fill the current knowledge gap about socio-economic factors about breeders, their methods and attitudes, we investigated the current status of rice breeding programmes and provide data about the global population of rice breeders using an extensive list of characteristics

  • To survey willingness to adopt (WTA), we presented breeders with a brief scenario of rapid generation advance (RGA) operations at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI)

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the critical role rice breeders play to ensure food security, there is a lack of information regarding their current socio-economic characteristics, constraints and attitudes towards technology adoption. Some key concepts like budget, experience, local ecosystems, level of education and even main breeding method have hardly been surveyed in the past This clouds any policy making regarding scientists in national agricultural research programmes, it makes it difficult to assess the needs and problems local rice breeders face around the world. This poses a dangerous mix of mutually reinforcing factors that will lead to a strong increase in demand This increase will be especially strong in the developing world where poverty and population growth are high and climate change is expected to hit hardest [22]. These factors will increase the general level of demand but accelerate the speed of increase as well This means breeding methods need to deliver better rice varieties, but deliver them more quickly as well. These challenges require a drastic rethinking of current breeding methods to be able to meet future demands [1, 11, 12]

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