High-yielding varieties The high-yielding varieties are a group of crops created during the
Green Revolution to increase global food production radically. The first Green Revolution rice variety,
IR8, was produced in 1966 at the
International Rice Research Institute through a cross between an Indonesian variety named "Peta" and a Chinese variety named "Dee Geo Woo Gen". Green Revolution varieties were bred to have short strong stems so that the rice would not lodge or fall over. This enabled them to stay upright and productive even with heavy applications of fertiliser. Rice containing these added proteins can be used as a component in
oral rehydration solutions to treat
diarrheal diseases, thereby shortening their duration and reducing recurrence. Such supplements may also help reverse
anaemia.
Flood-tolerance in the Philippines In areas subject to
flooding, farmers have long planted flood-tolerant varieties known as
deepwater rice. In South and
South East Asia, flooding affects some each year. Flooding has historically led to massive losses in yields, such as in the Philippines, where in 2006, rice crops worth $65 million were lost to flooding. Standard rice varieties cannot withstand stagnant flooding for more than about a week, since it disallows the plant access to necessary requirements such as sunlight and gas exchange. The Swarna Sub1 cultivar can tolerate week-long submergence, consuming carbohydrates efficiently and continuing to grow. with the Sub1A
transgene is robustly tolerant of submergence for as long as two weeks, offering much improved flood survival for farmers' crops. IRRI has created Sub1A varieties and distributed them to Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Nepal, and the Philippines.
Drought-tolerance Drought represents a significant environmental stress for rice production, with of rainfed rice production in South and South East Asia often at risk. Under drought conditions, without sufficient water to afford them the ability to obtain the required levels of
nutrients from the soil, conventional commercial rice varieties can be severely affected—as happened for example in India early in the 21st century. The
International Rice Research Institute conducts research into developing drought-tolerant rice varieties, including the varieties Sahbhagi Dhan, Sahod Ulan, and Sookha dhan, currently being employed by farmers in India, the Philippines, and Nepal respectively.
Salt-tolerance is an issue.
Soil salinity poses a major threat to rice crop productivity, particularly along low-lying coastal areas during the dry season. For example, roughly of the coastal areas of
Bangladesh are affected by saline soils. These high concentrations of salt can severely affect rice plants'
physiology, especially during early stages of growth, and as such farmers are often forced to abandon these areas. Progress has been made in developing rice varieties capable of tolerating such conditions; the hybrid created from the cross between the commercial rice variety IR56 and the wild rice species
Oryza coarctata is one example.
O. coarctata can grow in soils with double the limit of salinity of normal varieties, but does not produce edible rice. Cold-tolerant varieties including risotto rice and basmati rice have been trialled successfully on peaty soil in England in 2025. If, as is probable, global warming raises the temperature by 2°C or more, rice could be grown across the country.
Reducing methane emissions Producing rice in
paddies is harmful for the environment due to the release of methane by
methanogenic bacteria. These bacteria live in the anaerobic waterlogged soil, consuming nutrients released by rice roots. Putting the
barley gene
SUSIBA2 into rice creates a shift in biomass production from root to shoot, decreasing the methanogen population, and resulting in a reduction of methane emissions of up to 97%. Further, the modification increases the amount of rice grains.
C4 rice C4 rice is a proposed rice that uses
C4 photosynthesis. It is currently in development by the C4 Rice Consortium.
Model organism Rice is used as a
model organism for investigating the mechanisms of
meiosis and
DNA repair in higher plants. For example, study using rice has shown that the gene
OsRAD51C is necessary for the accurate repair of DNA double-strand breaks during meiosis. == In human culture ==