2024 Rice Field Day updates producers on latest research, rice breeding (2024)

Aug. 9, 2024

By John Lovett
University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture
Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station

Fast facts

  • Arkansas rice farmers get early start on 2024 crop, harvest underway
  • Keith Glover announced as chairman of USA Rice
  • Rice breeders provide update on improvements

(860 words)

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STUTTGART, Ark. —More than 350 people attended the 2024 Rice Field Day at the Rice Research and Extension Center on Aug. 1 to hear research updates on rice breeding, precision agriculture and weed control.

Arkansas remains the nation’s top rice producer, with over 1.4 million acres of rice this year. The annual Rice Field Day gives researchers and extension specialists with the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture an opportunity to share the latest information with the rice industry. These rice experts presented updated management recommendations and highlighted research projects supported by Arkansas rice growers through the Arkansas Rice Research and Promotion Board’s Rice Check-off Program.

The day commenced with field tours and concluded with remarks by leaders in the industry. Keith Glover, president and CEO of Producers Rice Mill in Stuttgart, announced that USA Rice, the national trade association, had elected him as chairman.

“Today is my first day of a two-year term as chairman of USA Rice,” Glover said on Aug. 1. “Just like you have all of these wonderful people working on your behalf every day on the research side, you have the same activities taking place on the marketing and promotion side through USA Rice.”

Quoting the most recent export update, Glover said U.S. rough rice sales and exports for long grain were up 152 percent this year. On the milled rice side, the biggest markets for rice grown in Arkansas and the Mid-South are in Iraq and Haiti, Glover noted.

Glover also said he is excited to see how the market responds to the two latest rice releases from the Division of Agriculture’s rice breeding program: Ozark, a short-season, conventional long-grain, and Taurus, a very short-season, semi-dwarf conventional medium-grain.

“Check-off is the money that people like you, the farmers, and others who make the contribution, goes to do research,” said Alton Johnson, director of the Rice Research and Extension Center. “Thirty-five new rice varieties, drone research, AI, and all of these different things we do are supported by the check-off dollars. Without that and the contribution it makes, Arkansas would not be the top rice-producing state in the country.”

Johnson added that the United States ranks 13th in rice production worldwide and sixth in rice exports.

The 2024 field day was co-hosted by the Division of Agriculture and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Research Service, which operates the neighboring Dale Bumpers National Rice Research Center. Shannon Pinson, a research geneticist for USDA-ARS, commented on the high interest level shown by attendees.

“The field day attendees were full of interest and questions.They were clearly here to gain the knowledge your group has to offer,” she said. “That says a lot about the reputation the Rice Research and Extension Center has for conducting quality research.”

2024 rice crop review

This year, favorable conditions for early planting have led to rice harvest already beginning in some parts of the state. “July rice” in Arkansas is a first since 2012, said Jarrod Hardke, extension rice agronomist for the Division of Agriculture. Most of Arkansas’ rice country is on the cusp of harvest season.

“Generally speaking, we had a very rapid start this year, not just for rice but for all crops, and it was really shocking how early in April that comments were coming in saying ‘We’re done,’” Hardke said. “So, we knew we were off to a good start this year.”

Winds and frequent, intermittent rainfall led to issues with applying herbicides and fertilizers during the season’s first six weeks. Despite the challenges and inefficiencies created by the weather, Hardke said the state’s rice crop “overall looks very good.”

Rice breeding update

Xueyan Sha, senior rice breeder and professor of plant rice and genetics, joined Christian De Guzman, assistant professor of rice breeding and genetics, to share the latest updates from the Rice Breeding Program operated through the Division of Agriculture’s research arm, the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station.

Long-grain, medium-grain, and short-grain varieties are developed in the program, some in collaboration with private companies and the Louisiana State University AgCenter.

Sha said the recently released new long-grain variety Ozark offers better yields, milling, and grain quality, and helped alleviate the seed shortage issue faced by Arkansas rice growers earlier this year. The Rice Breeding Program has a number of potential new long-grain experimentals in the pipeline with earlier maturity and improved characteristics sought by grain mills, such as a larger but more slender grain. He also noted the new medium-grain, Taurus, provides significant yield advantages to Titan and Jupiter.

Disease resistance, straw strength, grain chalk,milling quality, and yield potential are other characteristics sought by rice breeders. De Guzman noted they continue to work on aromatic varieties like the jasmine-type ARoma 22 and other niche varieties with high amylose content, and “waxy” or “sticky” rice.

“ARoma 22 is a very good quality aromatic rice, and we have some potential lines which are also conventional and aromatic and yield as much as Diamond, that we are looking forward to possibly releasing,” De Guzman said.

The rice breeders recognized support from the Rice Check-off Program and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website:https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visithttps://uada.edu/.Follow us on Twitter at@AgInArk. To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visitwww.uaex.uada.edu.

About the Division of Agriculture

The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture’s mission is to strengthen agriculture, communities, and families by connecting trusted research to the adoption of best practices. Through the Agricultural Experiment Station and the Cooperative Extension Service, the Division of Agriculture conducts research and extension work within the nation’s historic land grant education system.

The Division of Agriculture is one of 20 entities within the University of Arkansas System. It has offices in all 75 counties in Arkansas and faculty on five system campuses.

The University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture offers all its Extension and Research programs and services without regard to race, color, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, national origin, religion, age, disability, marital or veteran status, genetic information, or any other legally protected status, and is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.

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Media Contact: John Lovett
U of A System Division of Agriculture
Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station
(479) 763-5929
jlovett@uada.edu

2024 Rice Field Day updates producers on latest research, rice breeding (2024)

FAQs

What is the rice breeding program? ›

In conventional breeding, and for rice programs as well, two parents are crossed and segregating generations are screened for the trait of interest, for example, disease resistance, maturity, height and protein. Uniform lines are tested for yield and along with resistance, desirable varieties are selected and released.

Where are rice fields grown? ›

California ranks as the second-largest rice-growing state in the United States. The majority of rice is grown in the Sacramento Valley, where hot days and cool nights—along with clay soil that holds on to virtually every drop of moisture—create the perfect conditions for growing California's distinctive japonica rice.

What is the 3 line breeding system in rice? ›

Three line system: In this method hybrid rice is produced by utilizing cytoplasmic genetic male sterile system. The source of male sterile cytoplasm used is wild abortive. In this method there are three different lines i.e. A-line or male sterile line, B-line or maintainer line and restorer line or R- line.

What is golden rice program? ›

The Golden Rice program's objective is, following consumption, to increase circulating vitamin A levels in the blood to counteract vitamin A deficiency, thereby boosting immunity to common diseases and significantly reducing childhood blindness, of which vitamin A deficiency is the leading cause.

What is the LSU rice breeding program? ›

The breeding program has a comprehensive field testing component, winter nursery, a SNP DNA marker lab, and strives to incorporate enabling technologies from multiple disciplines. Varieties developed by the program are widely grown across Louisiana and the Southern U.S. rice production region.

How much is the rice master program? ›

Graduate Programs
Tuition and FeesSemester / Reduced1Annual / Reduced1
Tuition - Students entering 2023$19,700$39,400
Tuition - Students entering 2022$19,500$39,000
Graduate Student Association Fee$22.50$45
Student Organization Fee$4$8
177 more rows

What are the benefits of inbred rice? ›

Inbred rice varieties are known for their ability to thrive in specific local conditions, making them reliable choices for farmers in those areas. Additionally, inbred rice allows farmers to save seeds from their crops for the next planting season.

What is the rice Smart Program? ›

The rice button cooks at low pressure and adjusts the cooking time depending on the amount of liquid and rice in the pot. This is the only smart program that does not allow you to change the time. “Less” makes firmer rice, “Normal” cooks rice with an average texture, and “More” creates rice that is softer like risotto.

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