Morphology of Malaysian Weedy Rice (Oryza sativa): Diversity, Origin and Implications for Weed Management
Weedy rice is one of the most dominant and competitive weed species found throughout rice planting areas worldwide. In Malaysia, a combination of agricultural practices such as direct seeding and shared use of machinery has contributed to the rapid proliferation of weedy rice across paddy fields in...
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Published in | Weed science Vol. 64; no. 3; pp. 501 - 512 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Cambridge, UK
The Weed Science Society of America
01.07.2016
Cambridge University Press Weed Science Society of America |
Subjects | |
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Abstract | Weedy rice is one of the most dominant and competitive weed species found throughout rice planting areas worldwide. In Malaysia, a combination of agricultural practices such as direct seeding and shared use of machinery has contributed to the rapid proliferation of weedy rice across paddy fields in recent decades. Here, we report on the morphological characterization of weedy rice populations and inferred origin(s) of different morphotypes present in Peninsular Malaysia. Eight weedy rice morphotypes were distinguished based on a combination of traits such as awn presence/absence and hull color, from 193 accessions collected in 17 locations. Results showed a high proportion of awnless accessions (strawhull-, intermediate strawhull-, and brownhull-colored morphotypes, together composing 65% of sampled accessions), with awned accessions represented by strawhull, brownhull, and blackhull forms. Clustering and PCA analyses revealed four major clusters: (1) O. rufipogon and the majority of awned, blackhull, and brownhull—suggestive of a type of weedy rice originating from wild Oryza populations; (2) elite indica cultivar rice and the majority of strawhull weeds—supporting a previous proposal that weedy rice from Malaysia mainly evolved from indirect selection on cultivars for easy-shattering feral forms; (3) the majority of brownhull; and (4) a mixture of other weedy morphotypes—potentially reflecting multiple origins and subsequent admixture. The combination of key morphological descriptors will be useful for advising farmers appropriately in strategies for controlling the spread of weedy rice, including periodic manual weeding to reduce buildup of the seed bank in the fields. Nomenclature: Weedy rice, Oryza sativa L. ORYSA; rice cultivars, Oryza sativa L. ssp. indica S. Kato ORYSA; wild rice, Oryza rufipogon Griffiths. |
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AbstractList | Weedy rice is one of the most dominant and competitive weed species found throughout rice planting areas worldwide. In Malaysia, a combination of agricultural practices such as direct seeding and shared use of machinery has contributed to the rapid proliferation of weedy rice across paddy fields in recent decades. Here, we report on the morphological characterization of weedy rice populations and inferred origin(s) of different morphotypes present in Peninsular Malaysia. Eight weedy rice morphotypes were distinguished based on a combination of traits such as awn presence/absence and hull color, from 193 accessions collected in 17 locations. Results showed a high proportion of awnless accessions (strawhull-, intermediate strawhull-, and brownhull-colored morphotypes, together composing 65% of sampled accessions), with awned accessions represented by strawhull, brownhull, and blackhull forms. Clustering and PCA analyses revealed four major clusters: (1)
O. rufipogon
and the majority of awned, blackhull, and brownhull—suggestive of a type of weedy rice originating from wild
Oryza
populations; (2) elite
indica
cultivar rice and the majority of strawhull weeds—supporting a previous proposal that weedy rice from Malaysia mainly evolved from indirect selection on cultivars for easy-shattering feral forms; (3) the majority of brownhull; and (4) a mixture of other weedy morphotypes—potentially reflecting multiple origins and subsequent admixture. The combination of key morphological descriptors will be useful for advising farmers appropriately in strategies for controlling the spread of weedy rice, including periodic manual weeding to reduce buildup of the seed bank in the fields. Weedy rice is one of the most dominant and competitive weed species found throughout rice planting areas worldwide. In Malaysia, a combination of agricultural practices such as direct seeding and shared use of machinery has contributed to the rapid proliferation of weedy rice across paddy fields in recent decades. Here, we report on the morphological characterization of weedy rice populations and inferred origin(s) of different morphotypes present in Peninsular Malaysia. Eight weedy rice morphotypes were distinguished based on a combination of traits such as awn presence/absence and hull color, from 193 accessions collected in 17 locations. Results showed a high proportion of awnless accessions (strawhull-, intermediate strawhull-, and brownhull-colored morphotypes, together composing 65% of sampled accessions), with awned accessions represented by strawhull, brownhull, and blackhull forms. Clustering and PCA analyses revealed four major clusters: (1) O. rufipogon and the majority of awned, blackhull, and brownhull—suggestive of a type of weedy rice originating from wild Oryza populations; (2) elite indica cultivar rice and the majority of strawhull weeds—supporting a previous proposal that weedy rice from Malaysia mainly evolved from indirect selection on cultivars for easy-shattering feral forms; (3) the majority of brownhull; and (4) a mixture of other weedy morphotypes—potentially reflecting multiple origins and subsequent admixture. The combination of key morphological descriptors will be useful for advising farmers appropriately in strategies for controlling the spread of weedy rice, including periodic manual weeding to reduce buildup of the seed bank in the fields. Weedy rice is one of the most dominant and competitive weed species found throughout rice planting areas worldwide. In Malaysia, a combination of agricultural practices such as direct seeding and shared use of machinery has contributed to the rapid proliferation of weedy rice across paddy fields in recent decades. Here, we report on the morphological characterization of weedy rice populations and inferred origin(s) of different morphotypes present in Peninsular Malaysia. Eight weedy rice morphotypes were distinguished based on a combination of traits such as awn presence/absence and hull color, from 193 accessions collected in 17 locations. Results showed a high proportion of awnless accessions (strawhull-, intermediate strawhull-, and brownhull-colored morphotypes, together composing 65% of sampled accessions), with awned accessions represented by strawhull, brownhull, and blackhull forms. Clustering and PCA analyses revealed four major clusters: (1) O. rufipogon and the majority of awned, blackhull, and brownhull-suggestive of a type of weedy rice originating from wild Oryza populations; (2) elite indica cultivar rice and the majority of strawhull weeds-supporting a previous proposal that weedy rice from Malaysia mainly evolved from indirect selection on cultivars for easy-shattering feral forms; (3) the majority of brownhull; and (4) a mixture of other weedy morphotypes-potentially reflecting multiple origins and subsequent admixture. The combination of key morphological descriptors will be useful for advising farmers appropriately in strategies for controlling the spread of weedy rice, including periodic manual weeding to reduce buildup of the seed bank in the fields. Weedy rice is one of the most dominant and competitive weed species found throughout rice planting areas worldwide. In Malaysia, a combination of agricultural practices such as direct seeding and shared use of machinery has contributed to the rapid proliferation of weedy rice across paddy fields in recent decades. Here, we report on the morphological characterization of weedy rice populations and inferred origin(s) of different morphotypes present in Peninsular Malaysia. Eight weedy rice morphotypes were distinguished based on a combination of traits such as awn presence/absence and hull color, from 193 accessions collected in 17 locations. Results showed a high proportion of awnless accessions (strawhull-, intermediate strawhull-, and brownhull-colored morphotypes, together composing 65% of sampled accessions), with awned accessions represented by strawhull, brownhull, and blackhull forms. Clustering and PCA analyses revealed four major clusters: (1) O. rufipogon and the majority of awned, blackhull, and brownhull—suggestive of a type of weedy rice originating from wild Oryza populations; (2) elite indica cultivar rice and the majority of strawhull weeds—supporting a previous proposal that weedy rice from Malaysia mainly evolved from indirect selection on cultivars for easy-shattering feral forms; (3) the majority of brownhull; and (4) a mixture of other weedy morphotypes—potentially reflecting multiple origins and subsequent admixture. The combination of key morphological descriptors will be useful for advising farmers appropriately in strategies for controlling the spread of weedy rice, including periodic manual weeding to reduce buildup of the seed bank in the fields. Nomenclature: Weedy rice, Oryza sativa L. ORYSA; rice cultivars, Oryza sativa L. ssp. indica S. Kato ORYSA; wild rice, Oryza rufipogon Griffiths. |
Author | Idris, Akmal Adilah Chuah, Tse-Seng Olsen, Kenneth M. Tam, Sheh May Neik, Ting-Xiang Song, Beng-Kah Sudianto, Edi |
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Cites_doi | 10.1007/s001220050417 10.1111/j.1365-3180.2011.00890.x 10.1007/s10722-004-6109-x 10.1111/j.1445-6664.2004.00136.x 10.1111/mec.12922 10.1186/1471-2148-10-180 10.1016/j.cropro.2010.02.010 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2007.03489.x 10.1007/s10722-011-9690-9 10.1111/j.1365-3180.2010.00810.x 10.1614/WS-08-112.1 10.1007/s10722-005-2257-x |
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Keywords | wild rice, Oryza rufipogon Griffiths rice cultivars, Oryza sativa L. ssp. indica S. Kato ORYSA weedy rice Weedy rice, Oryza sativa L. ORYSA weed control Morphological characterization rice seed traits |
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References | Azmi (S0043174500022001_ref4) 2007; 35 S0043174500022001_ref10 S0043174500022001_ref20 S0043174500022001_ref12 S0043174500022001_ref8 S0043174500022001_ref22 S0043174500022001_ref2 Bakar (S0043174500022001_ref6) 2000 Karim (S0043174500022001_ref14) 2010 Ahmed (S0043174500022001_ref1) 2012; 23 Delouche (S0043174500022001_ref9) 2007 Watanabe (S0043174500022001_ref21) 2000 Azmi (S0043174500022001_ref5) 1994 S0043174500022001_ref13 Azmi (S0043174500022001_ref3) 1998 S0043174500022001_ref16 (S0043174500022001_ref7) 2007 S0043174500022001_ref15 S0043174500022001_ref18 Hussain (S0043174500022001_ref11) 2010; 21 S0043174500022001_ref17 S0043174500022001_ref19 |
References_xml | – start-page: 18 volume-title: A Manual for the Identification and Control of Padi Angin (Weedy Rice) in Malaysia year: 1998 ident: S0043174500022001_ref3 contributor: fullname: Azmi – ident: S0043174500022001_ref20 doi: 10.1007/s001220050417 – start-page: 327 volume-title: Proceedings of the National Rice Conference 2010 year: 2010 ident: S0043174500022001_ref14 contributor: fullname: Karim – volume: 21 start-page: 27 year: 2010 ident: S0043174500022001_ref11 article-title: Morphological study of the relationships between weedy rice accessions (Oryza sativa complex) and commercial rice varieties in Pulau Pinang rice granary area publication-title: Trop Life Sci Res contributor: fullname: Hussain – ident: S0043174500022001_ref10 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3180.2011.00890.x – ident: S0043174500022001_ref2 doi: 10.1007/s10722-004-6109-x – start-page: 51 volume-title: Wild and Weedy Rice in Rice Ecosystems in Asia—A Review year: 2000 ident: S0043174500022001_ref6 contributor: fullname: Bakar – ident: S0043174500022001_ref13 doi: 10.1111/j.1445-6664.2004.00136.x – ident: S0043174500022001_ref19 doi: 10.1111/mec.12922 – ident: S0043174500022001_ref16 doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-10-180 – ident: S0043174500022001_ref18 doi: 10.1016/j.cropro.2010.02.010 – volume: 23 start-page: 17 year: 2012 ident: S0043174500022001_ref1 article-title: Comparative study on vegetative and reproductive development between weedy rice morphotypes and commercial rice varieties in Perak, Malaysia publication-title: Trop Life Sci Res contributor: fullname: Ahmed – start-page: 72 volume-title: Descriptors for wild and cultivated rice (Oryza spp.) year: 2007 ident: S0043174500022001_ref7 – start-page: 156 volume-title: Weedy Rices—Origin, Biology, Ecology and Control year: 2007 ident: S0043174500022001_ref9 contributor: fullname: Delouche – ident: S0043174500022001_ref15 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2007.03489.x – ident: S0043174500022001_ref22 doi: 10.1007/s10722-011-9690-9 – ident: S0043174500022001_ref8 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-3180.2010.00810.x – ident: S0043174500022001_ref17 doi: 10.1614/WS-08-112.1 – ident: S0043174500022001_ref12 doi: 10.1007/s10722-005-2257-x – start-page: 25 volume-title: Wild and Weedy Rice in Rice Ecosystems in Asia—A Review year: 2000 ident: S0043174500022001_ref21 contributor: fullname: Watanabe – start-page: 29 volume-title: Proceedings of the Malaysian Congress of Science and Technology year: 1994 ident: S0043174500022001_ref5 contributor: fullname: Azmi – volume: 35 start-page: 319 year: 2007 ident: S0043174500022001_ref4 article-title: Weed flora landscapes of the Muda rice granary in the new millennium: a descriptive analysis publication-title: J Trop Agric Food Sci contributor: fullname: Azmi |
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Snippet | Weedy rice is one of the most dominant and competitive weed species found throughout rice planting areas worldwide. In Malaysia, a combination of agricultural... Weedy rice is one of the most dominant and competitive weed species found throughout rice planting areas worldwide. In Malaysia, a combination of agricultural... |
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SubjectTerms | Agricultural practices Competition Cultivars Gene loci Morphological characterization Morphology Rice Seed banks seed traits Seeds Studies type: Weed Management Weed control weed control, weedy rice WEED MANAGEMENT Weeds |
Title | Morphology of Malaysian Weedy Rice (Oryza sativa): Diversity, Origin and Implications for Weed Management |
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