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Garris ''et al.'' (2004) used [[Simple Sequence Repeat|SSR]]s to sort ''Oryza sativa'' into five groups; ''temperate japonica'', ''tropical japonica'' and ''aromatic'' comprise the ''japonica'' varieties, while ''indica'' and ''aus'' comprise the ''indica'' varieties.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Garris ''et al.''|year=2004|title=Genetic structure and diversity in ''Oryza sativa'' L.|journal=Genetics|url=http://www.genetics.org/cgi/content/abstract/genetics.104.035642v1?ck=nck}}</ref>
Garris ''et al.'' (2004) used [[Simple Sequence Repeat|SSR]]s to sort ''Oryza sativa'' into five groups; ''temperate japonica'', ''tropical japonica'' and ''aromatic'' comprise the ''japonica'' varieties, while ''indica'' and ''aus'' comprise the ''indica'' varieties.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Garris ''et al.''|year=2004|title=Genetic structure and diversity in ''Oryza sativa'' L.|journal=Genetics|url=http://www.genetics.org/cgi/content/abstract/genetics.104.035642v1?ck=nck}}</ref>

== Nomenclature and taxonomy of the cultivars ==
{{Expand-section}}

==List of the cultivars ==
{{Expand-section}}


== History of domestication and cultivation ==
== History of domestication and cultivation ==

Revision as of 23:36, 4 June 2009

Oryza sativa
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
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Order:
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Genus:
Species:
O. sativa
Binomial name
Oryza sativa

Oryza sativa (common names include Asian rice) is the plant species known in English as rice. Oryza sativa has the smallest cereal genome consisting of just 430Mb across 12 chromosomes. It is renowned for being easy to genetically modify and is a model organism for cereal biology.

Classification

Oryza sativa contains two major subspecies: the sticky, short grained japonica or sinica variety, and the non-sticky, long-grained indica variety. Japonica are usually cultivated in dry fields, in temperate East Asia, upland areas of Southeast Asia and high elevations in South Asia, while indica are mainly lowland rices, grown mostly submerged, throughout tropical Asia. Rice is known to come in a variety of colors, including: white, brown, black, purple, and red.[1]

A third subspecies, which is broad-grained and thrives under tropical conditions, was identified based on morphology and initially called javanica, but is now known as tropical japonica. Examples of this variety include the medium grain “Tinawon” and “Unoy” cultivars, which are grown in the high-elevation rice terraces of the Cordillera Mountains of northern Luzon, Philippines.[2]

Glaszmann (1987) used isozymes to sort Oryza sativa into six groups: japonica, aromatic, indica, aus, rayada, and ashina.[3]

Garris et al. (2004) used SSRs to sort Oryza sativa into five groups; temperate japonica, tropical japonica and aromatic comprise the japonica varieties, while indica and aus comprise the indica varieties.[4]

Nomenclature and taxonomy of the cultivars

List of the cultivars

History of domestication and cultivation

Based on one chloroplast and two nuclear gene regions, Londo et al. (2006) conclude that Oryza sativa rice was domesticated at least twice—indica in eastern India, Myanmar and Thailand; and japonica in southern China—though they concede that there is archaeological and genetic evidence for a single domestication of rice in the lowlands of China.[5]

Abstract pattern of terrace rice fields in Yuanyang, Yunnan Province, southern China.

Because the functional allele for non-shattering—the critical indicator of domestication in grains—as well as five other single nucleotide polymorphisms, is identical in both indica and japonica, Vaughan et al. (2008) determined that there was a single domestication event for Oryza sativa in the region of the Yangtze river valley.[6]

Continental East Asia

Rice appears to have been used by the Early Neolithic populations of Lijiacun and Yunchanyan.[7] Evidence of possible rice cultivation in China from ca. 11,500 BP has been found, however it is still questioned whether the rice was indeed being cultivated, or instead being gathered as wild rice.[8] Bruce Smith, an archaeologist at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., who has written on the origins of agriculture, says that evidence has been mounting that the Yangtze was probably the site of the earliest rice cultivation.[9]

Zhao (1998) argues that collection of wild rice in the Late Pleistocene had, by 6400 BC, led to the use of primarily domesticated rice.[10] Morphological studies of rice phytoliths from the Diaotonghuan archaeological site clearly show the transition from the collection of wild rice to the cultivation of domesticated rice. The large number of wild rice phytoliths at the Diaotonghuan level dating from 12,000-11,000 BP indicates that wild rice collection was part of the local means of subsistence. Changes in the morphology of Diaotonghuan phytoliths dating from 10,000-8,000 BP show that rice had by this time been domesticated.[11] Analysis of Chinese rice residues from Pengtoushan which were C14(carbon dating) dated to 8200-7800 BCE show that rice had been domesticated by this time.[12]

In 1998, Crawford & Shen reported that the earliest of 14 AMS or radiocarbon dates on rice from at least nine Early to Middle Neolithic sides is no older than 7000 BC, that rice from the Hemudu and Luojiajiao sites indicates that rice domestication likely began before 5000 BC, but that most sites in China from which rice remains have been recovered are younger than 5000 BC.[7]

South Asia

Paddy fields in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu

Wild Oryza rice appeared in the Belan and Ganges valley regions of northern India as early as 4530 BC and 5440 BC respectively,[13] although many believe it may have appeared earlier. The Encyclopedia Britannica—on the subject of the first certain cultivated rice—holds that:[14]

Template:Quotation1

Denis J. Murphy (2007) further details the spread of cultivated rice from India into South-east Asia:[15]

Template:Quotation1

Rice was cultivated in the Indus Valley Civilization.[16] Agricultural activity during the second millennium BC included rice cultivation in the Kashmir and Harrappan regions.[13] Mixed farming was the basis of Indus valley economy.[16]

Punjab is the largest producer and consumer of rice in India.

Korean peninsula and Japanese archipelago

Utagawa Hiroshige, Rice field in Oki province, view of O-Yama.

Mainstream archaeological evidence derived from palaeoethnobotanical investigations indicate that dry-land rice was introduced to Korea and Japan some time between 3500 and 1200 BC. The cultivation of rice in Korea and Japan during that time occurred on a small-scale, fields were impermanent plots, and evidence shows that in some cases domesticated and wild grains were planted together. The technological, subsistence, and social impact of rice and grain cultivation is not evident in archaeological data until after 1500 BC. For example, intensive wet-paddy rice agriculture was introduced into Korea shortly before or during the Middle Mumun Pottery Period (c. 850–550 BC) and reached Japan by the Final Jōmon or Initial Yayoi circa 300 BC.[7][17]

In 2003, Korean archaeologists alleged that they discovered burnt grains of domesticated rice in Soro-ri, Korea, which dated to 13,000 BC. These predate the oldest grains in China, which were dated to 10,000 BC, and potentially challenge the mainstream explanation that domesticated rice originated in China.[18] The findings were received by academia with strong skepticism, and the results and their publicizing has been cited as being driven by a combination of nationalist and regional interests.[19]

Southeast Asia

Using water buffalo to plough rice fields in Java; Indonesia is the world's third largest paddy rice producer and its cultivation has transformed much of the country's landscape.

Rice is the staple for all classes in contemporary South East Asia, from Myanmar to Indonesia. In Indonesia, evidence of wild Oryza rice on the island of Sulawesi dates from 3000 BCE. The evidence for the earliest cultivation, however, comes from eighth century stone inscriptions from Java, which show kings levied taxes in rice. Divisions of labor between men, women, and animals that are still in place in Indonesian rice cultivation, can be seen carved into the ninth-century Prambanan temples in Central Java. In the sixteenth century, Europeans visiting the Indonesian islands saw rice as a new prestige food served to the aristocracy during ceremonies and feasts. Rice production in Indonesian history is linked to the development of iron tools and the domestication of water buffalo for cultivation of fields and manure for fertilizer. Once covered in dense forest, much of the Indonesian landscape has been gradually cleared for permanent fields and settlements as rice cultivation developed over the last fifteen hundred years.[20]

Evidence of erosion at Banaue Rice Terraces

In the Philippines, the greatest evidence of rice cultivation since ancient times can be found in the Cordillera Mountain Range of Luzon in the provinces of Apayao, Benguet, Mountain Province and Ifugao. The Banaue Rice Terraces (Tagalog: Hagdan-hagdang Palayan ng Banaue) are 2,000 to 3,000-year old terraces that were carved into the mountains by ancestors of the Batad indigenous people. It is commonly thought that the terraces were built with minimal equipment, largely by hand. The terraces are located approximately 1,500 meters (5000 ft) above sea level and cover 10,360 square kilometers (about 4,000 square miles) of mountainside. They are fed by an ancient irrigation system from the rainforests above the terraces. It is said that if the steps are put end to end it would encircle half the globe. The Rice Terraces (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) are commonly referred to by Filipinos as the "Eighth Wonder of the World".

Evidence of wet rice cultivation as early as 2200 BC has been discovered at both Ban Chiang and Ban Prasat in Thailand.

By the 19th Century, encroaching European expansionism in the area increased rice production in much of South East Asia, and Thailand, then known as Siam. British Burma became the world's largest exporter of rice, from the turn of the 20th century up till the 1970s, when neighbouring Thailand exceeded Burma.

References

  1. ^ Oka (1988)
  2. ^ CECAP, PhilRice and IIRR. 2000. “Highland Rice Production in the Philippine Cordillera.”
  3. ^ Glaszmann, J. C. (2004). "Isozymes and classification of Asian rice varieties". Theoretical and Applied Genetics.
  4. ^ Garris; et al. (2004). "Genetic structure and diversity in Oryza sativa L." Genetics. {{cite journal}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author= (help)
  5. ^ Londo et al. (2006). "Phylogeography of Asian wild rice, Oryza rufipogon, reveals multiple independent domestications of cultivated rice, Oryza sativa". PNAS.
  6. ^ Vaughan; et al. (2008). "The evolving story of rice evolution". Plant Science. 174 (4): 394–408. doi:10.1016/j.plantsci.2008.01.016. {{cite journal}}: Explicit use of et al. in: |author= (help)
  7. ^ a b c Crawford and Shen 1998
  8. ^ Harrington, Spencer P.M. (June 11, 1997). "Earliest Rice". Archaeology. Archaeological Institute of America. Rice cultivation began in China ca. 11,500 years ago, some 3,500 years earlier than previously believed
  9. ^ Normile, Dennis (1997). "Yangtze seen as earliest rice site". Science. 275: 309–310.
  10. ^ Zhao, Z. 1998. The Middle Yangtze Region in China is the Place Where Rice was Domesticated: Phytolithic Evidence from the Diaotonghuan Cave, Northern Jiangxi. Antiquity 72:885–897.
  11. ^ MacNeish R. S. and Libby J. eds. (1995) Origins of Rice Agriculture. Publications in Anthropology No. 13.
  12. ^ The Formation of Chinese Civilization (2005), pp. 298
  13. ^ a b Smith, C. Wayne (2000). Sorghum: Origin, History, Technology, and Production. John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 0471242373.
  14. ^ "rice". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008.
  15. ^ Murphy, Denis J. (2007). People, Plants and Genes: The Story of Crops and Humanity. Oxford University Press. 178. ISBN 0199207135.
  16. ^ a b Kahn, Charles (2005).World History: Societies of the Past. Portage & Main Press. 92. ISBN 1553790456.
  17. ^ Crawford, G.W. and G.-A. Lee. 2003. Agricultural Origins in the Korean Peninsula. Antiquity 77(295):87–95.
  18. ^ Cf. BBC news (2003) [1]
  19. ^ Kim, Minkoo (2008), "Multivocality, Multifaceted Voices, and Korean Archaeology", Evaluating Multiple Narratives: Beyond Nationalist, Colonialist, Imperialist Archaeologies, New York: Springer, ISBN 978-0-387-76459-7
  20. ^ Taylor, Jean Gelman (2003). Indonesia: Peoples and Histories. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 8–9. ISBN 0-300-10518-5.