Hidden Rice Diversity in the Guianas

Hidden Rice Diversity in the Guianas

ORIGINAL RESEARCH published: 20 September 2019 doi: 10.3389/fpls.2019.01161 Hidden Rice Diversity in the Guianas Tinde Van Andel 1,2*, Margaretha A. Veltman 3, Alice Bertin 1, Harro Maat 4, Thomas Polime 5, Derk Hille Ris Lambers 6, Jerry Tjoe Awie 7, Hugo De Boer 1,3 and Vincent Manzanilla 3 1 Department Biodiversity Dynamics, Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden, Netherlands, 2 Biosystematics group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands, 3 Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway, 4 Knowledge, Technology and Innovation group, Wageningen University, Wageningen, Netherlands, 5 Wooko Makandie Foundation, Culemborg, Netherlands, 6 Dassenboslaan 15, Wageningen, Netherlands, 7 Department Research Management & Plant Breeding, Anne van Dijk Rice Research Centre (SNRI/ADRON), Nieuw Nickerie, Suriname Traditional crop varieties are an important source of genetic diversity for crop adaptation and modern breeding. Landraces of Asian (Oryza sativa) and African (Oryza glaberrima) rice have been well studied on the continents where they were domesticated. However, their history of cultivation in northern South America is poorly understood. Here, we reveal the rice diversity that is maintained by Maroons, descendants of enslaved Africans who fled to the interior forests of the Guianas ca. 300 years ago. We interviewed subsistence farmers who practice shifting cultivation along the Maroni and Lawa rivers that form the natural border between French Guiana and Suriname, and used ethnobotanical and morphological Edited by: methods to identify around 50 varieties, of which 15 were previously undocumented. Nina Rønsted, The genetic origin of these varieties was explored using the Angiosperms353 universal National Tropical Botanical Garden, United States probe set. Despite the large distances between sites and relative inaccessibility of the Reviewed by: area, phenotypic and genetic diversity did not display any geographic structure, which is Joana Magos Brehm, consistent with knowledge of seed exchange among members of the same ethnolinguistic University of Birmingham, group. Although improved US cultivars were introduced in Maroon villages in the 1940s, United Kingdom Nyree Zerega, these have not displaced the traditional landraces, which are cherished for their taste and Northwestern University, nutritious qualities and for their importance in Maroon spiritual life. The unique agricultural United States and ritual practices of Maroons confirm their role as custodians of rice diversity, a role *Correspondence: Tinde Van Andel that is currently under threat from external pressures and encroaching globalization. We [email protected] expect that the rice diversity uncovered in this study represents only a fraction of the total diversity in the Guianas and may constitute a large untapped resource that holds promise Specialty section: for future rice improvement. Further efforts to inventory and preserve these landraces will This article was submitted to Plant Systematics and Evolution, help to protect a precious cultural heritage and local food security. a section of the journal Frontiers in Plant Science Keywords: ethnobotany, French Guiana, landraces, Maroons, PAFTOL, rice, Suriname, traditional agriculture Received: 27 February 2019 Accepted: 26 August 2019 INTRODUCTION Published: 20 September 2019 Citation: Rice is the most widely consumed staple food in the world. Two species of domesticated rice exist: the Van Andel T, Veltman MA, widely cultivated Asian rice (Oryza sativa L.), domesticated in China some 10,000 years ago, and the Bertin A, Maat H, Polime T, lesser-known African rice (O. glaberrima Steud), domesticated about 3,000 years ago (Stein et al., 2018). Hille Ris Lambers D, Tjoe Awie J, De Boer H and Manzanilla V (2019) There are thousands of rice cultivars in Asia, Africa, and the Americas, and a significant proportion Hidden Rice Diversity in the Guianas. of this diversity is maintained in germplasm institutes (Jackson and Lettington, 2002; Sanchez et al., Front. Plant Sci. 10:1161. 2013). With a growing world population and increasing impacts of climate change, rice breeders doi: 10.3389/fpls.2019.01161 urgently need to develop more sustainable cultivars with higher yields, healthier grains and reduced Frontiers in Plant Science | www.frontiersin.org 1 September 2019 | Volume 10 | Article 1161 Van Andel et al. Maroon Rice Diversity environmental footprints (Stein et al., 2018; Wang et al., 2018). Commercial rice cultivation in the Guianas started only in The narrow genetic base of modern crop cultivars guarantees the early 1900s in the coastal swamps of Guyana and Suriname. phenotypic uniformity and genetic stability, but also makes them The first improved cultivars were based on traditional varieties vulnerable to environmental fluctuations, such as climate change, brought by indentured laborers from India and Java, who were reduced soil fertility, pests, and diseases (Zeven, 1998). recruited to work on the plantations after slavery was abolished Wild relatives of rice and traditional landraces often show (Codd and Peterkin, 1933; Stahel, 1933). From the 1950s onwards, adaptations towards marginal environments and pest resistance commercial Asian wetland cultivars suitable for mechanical and are therefore considered as an untapped genetic resource for harvesting were planted in newly constructed polders in breeding new cultivars resilient to future challenges (Alvarez et al., Suriname (Young and Angier, 2010; Maat and Van Andel, 2018). 2007; Wang et al., 2018). Landraces are also of key importance in local Commercial rice fields in French Guiana were not developed food security and preserving cultural heritage (Perales et al., 2005; until 1982, with the construction of coastal polders around Ardenghi et al., 2018), and reveal past migration patterns of humans Mana (Clément et al., 2011). Today, new cultivars continue to be and their contacts with outsiders (Westengen et al., 2014). Over the developed by the Anne van Dijk Rice Research Centre (SNRI/ last few decades, a severe genetic erosion of crops has taken place due ADRON, www.snri-adron.com), the national institute for rice to the replacement of landraces by modern cultivars (Zeven, 1998; research in Nieuw Nickerie, Suriname. Dyer et al., 2014). Much effort has been made to safeguard landraces Traditional Maroon agriculture is under pressure by increasing ex situ (in gene banks) to make their genetic resources available commercial and governmental interventions. Gold mining and for breeders, but the in situ conservation of agrodiversity within logging concessions have been issued on traditional territories, traditional farming systems has not been pursued to the same extent while prospects of education and employment stimulate (Maxted et al., 2002). Ethnobotanical inventories are powerful tools migration to urban areas (Paramaribo, Cayenne, St. Laurent), in detecting these neglected genetic resources and understanding the which in turn leads to a shortage of farm labor (Heemskerk, social and cultural factors involved in generating and maintaining 2000; Fleskens and Jorritsma, 2010; Price, 2012). Recent their diversity and distribution (Westengen et al., 2014; Ardenghi infrastructural developments (roads, airstrips) have facilitated et al., 2018). Here, we describe the rice landraces that are grown by access to the remote hinterland (Price, 2012) and commercially Maroons, descendants of escaped slaves in Suriname and French produced rice is now widely available in gold miner shops in Guiana and discuss their efforts and motivations to maintain the interior (Heemskerk, 2000). Shortening of fallow periods this diversity. in shifting cultivation plots and limited use of fertilizers keep Rice has been grown for centuries in the Guianas (Guyana, soil productivity low, with yields rarely exceeding 1000 kg/ha Suriname, and French Guiana). In the 17th and 18th centuries, and arguably not meeting local demand (Baumgart et al., 1998; plantation owners imported the crop from the US and West Fleskens and Jorritsma, 2010; Nascente and Kromocardi, 2017). Africa as provision for their enslaved laborers (Carney, 2009; Van The increasing influence of evangelical churches in Maroon Andel et al., 2016a). Asian rice was introduced by Portuguese territory, development organizations and government policies sailors in West Africa in the 16th century, and both African and have resulted in the perception of traditional Maroon farmers Asian rice were grown by African farmers before the onset of as ‘backward’ and in need of modernization (Heemskerk, 2003; the transatlantic slave trade (Linares, 2002). Rice was sold in Fleskens and Jorritsma, 2010; Léobal, 2016). These factors the husk, allowing for longer storage and germination ability actively discourage traditional Maroon farming, and put their (Carney, 2009). After their arrival in the Americas, slaves landraces at risk of disappearing. managed to gather leftover seeds from ship’s hold or other No systematic inventory of Maroon rice landraces with storage storage places and planted these in small provision grounds at the of vouchers or germplasm has been made thus far and their periphery of the plantations (Price, 1991; Van Andel et al., 2012). varieties have not been included in formal breeding experiments These home gardens enabled them to grow at least some of the or field trials. In 1936, a French agronomist discovered more familiar crops of their motherland and became central to their than 30 rice varieties

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