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Oryza barthii

Species of grass From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oryza barthii
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Oryza barthii, also called Barth's rice,[3] wild rice,[4] or African wild rice,[5] is a grass in the rice genus Oryza. It is an annual, erect to semierect grass. It has leaves with a short ligule (<13 millimetres (3364 in)), and panicles that are compact to open, rarely having secondary branching. The inflorescence structure are large spikelets, 7.7–12.3 millimetres (391283164 in) long and 2.3–3.5 millimetres (2325635256 in) wide, with strong awns (up to 20 centimetres (8 in) long), usually red. The inflorescences have anthers 1.5–3 millimetres (1525615128 in) long.

Quick Facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...

This wild rice grows in sub-Saharan Africa, and is found in mopane or savanna woodland, savanna or fadama. O. barthii grows in deep water, seasonally flooded land, stagnant water, and slowly flowing water or pools; it prefers clay or black cotton soils (vertisol), and is found in open habitats.[6] It is the progenitor of cultivated Oryza glaberrima, African rice.[7][8]

It has nodal roots hosting nitrogen fixing, photosynthetic strains of Bradyrhizobium.[9]

The sequenced genome of O. barthii was published in 2014.[10] This species is one of the AA species, the domesticated rices and their wild relatives.[8]

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Distribution

O. barthii is primarily found in West Africa.[8]

References

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