Abstract

Weedy rice refers to the unwanted plants of the genus Oryza that have some undesirable agronomic traits and pose a major threat to sustainable rice production worldwide. Widespread adoption of direct seeded rice and hybridization or gene flow between cultivated rice and their wild relatives has resulted in the creation and dissemination of weedy rice. Currently, weedy rice (Oryza sativa f. spontanea) has become one of the most common weeds infesting rice fields worldwide. In this paper, we review the biology, physiology, evolution, and genetic features of weedy rice. We also discuss the major obstacles in weedy rice management, including high diversity of weedy rice, ecological impacts of gene flow on weedy rice, changing climate, and weedy rice management. We then present a framework for the sustainable management and utilization of weedy rice. Our main emphasis is to explore the reservoir of natural variations in weedy germplasm and to utilize them for crop improvement. This review outlines some of the latest biotechnological tools to dissect the genetic backgrounds of several favorable traits of weedy rice that may prove beneficial for breeding and evolutionary studies on cultivated rice. We suggest that by merging the disciplines of genomics, breeding, and weed management, we can achieve the goal of sustainable rice production.

Highlights

  • We suggest that by merging the disciplines of genomics, breeding, and weed management, we can achieve the goal of sustainable rice production

  • The term weedy rice is more appropriate than red rice (Chen and Suh 2015)

  • The ability of weedy rice to thrive in adverse agro-environmental conditions and to imitate cultivars renders it difficult to control by simple means

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Summary

Introduction

Rice is an important nutritional resource and is globally grown on about 153 million hectares of land, 90% of which is in Asia (Chauhan 2013). About 350 species of different genera, including seven species of Oryza, have been reported as weeds

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Origin and evolution
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Outcrossing and its associated concerns in weedy rice
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Seed dormancy
Red pericarp color
Stress tolerance
Strategies to control and manage weedy rice
Potential value of weedy rice
Future outlook
Conclusion
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Findings
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Full Text
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