New maize and new friendships to beat
Thai drought
CIMMYT fosters regional partnerships and provides
seed to help researchers in Thailand get drought resistant maize
to farmers.
“We are very, very dry,” says farmer Yupin
Ruanpeth. “Last year we had a drought at flowering time and
we lost a lot of yield.” In fact, she explains, during the
last five years, her family’s farm has suffered from severe
drought three times in a row. The soil is good and in a year with
no drought they can harvest five tons of maize per hectare, but
last year they could only harvest three tons per hectare.
Geographically, the Thai province of Nakhon Sawan
lies only a short drive from lush lowland paddy fields, but it seems
a world away. In this region the rainy season (between May and September)
brings enough water for a single crop, usually of maize or cassava,
and in the dry season the fields lie fallow. Almost all maize in
Thailand is rainfed, grown under similar conditions.
At the Thai Department of Agriculture’s Nakhon
Sawan Field Crops Research Center, Pichet Grudloyma, senior maize
breeder, shows off the drought screening facilities. Screening is
carried out in the dry season, so that water availability can be
carefully controlled in two comparison plots: one well-watered and
one “drought” plot, where watering is stopped for two
weeks before and two weeks after flowering. Many of the experimental
lines and varieties being tested this year are here as the result
of the Asian Maize Network (AMNET). Funded by the Asian
Development Bank, this CIMMYT-led project has brought together
scientists from the national maize programs of five South East Asian
countries to develop drought tolerant maize varieties and deliver
them to farmers.
AMNET achievements
“We already have two releases under AMNET,” explains
Grudloyma. These are varieties produced by the national maize program,
focusing prior to AMNET on resistance to the disease downy mildew,
which have also proved themselves under drought screening. The first,
Nakhon Sawan 2, was released in 2006. The second, experimental hybrid
NSX 042029, has been popular in farmer participatory trials and
with local seed companies, and is slated for release in 2008. “This
is the best hybrid we have,” says Grudloyma with pride. “It's
drought tolerant, disease resistant, and easy to harvest by hand.”
The two hybrids incorporate both CIMMYT and Thai breeding materials,
a legacy of Thailand’s long relationship with the Center.
In current work under AMNET, the Thai breeders are
crossing lines from the national breeding program with new drought
tolerant materials provided each year by CIMMYT. “We screen
for drought tolerance in the dry season and downy mildew resistance
in the rainy season, and take the best materials forward each year,”
explains Grudloyma. “We now have many promising hybrids coming
though.”
Funding from the project has also had a big impact
on the team’s capacity to screen those hybrids. “We
had a small one to two hectare facility before; now we have four
hectares with a perfect controlled-irrigation system. Because we’ve
been in AMNET, we have good varieties and good fieldwork and screening
capacity. This is leading to other projects, for example we’re
currently working with GCP [the Generation
Challenge Program].” Thailand has also taken on a role
in seed distribution, receiving and sharing seed from the AMNET
member countries, and testing the varieties on the drought screening
plots at the Research Center.
Sharing knowledge across borders

Pichet Grudloyma (left) talks to farmer
Yupin Ruanpeth (second from right) and her family. |
For Grudloyma, this collaborative approach is a big
change. “We’ve learned a lot and gained a lot from our
friends in different countries. We each have different experiences,
and when we share problems we can adapt knowledge from others to
our own situations.”
The Thai researchers can come up with many examples
of things they have learned from their AMNET partners. “We
saw the very friendly relationships between a number of seed companies
and the Vietnam team, and we tried to modify the way we worked in
Thailand,” says Grudloyma. “This year we shared promising
hybrids with seed companies before release. Before that we just
worked with farmers and small seed producers, and the seed companies
could buy seed after varieties were released.” The result
has been wider distribution of new drought tolerant varieties: this
year the group received orders for enough parental materials for
NSX 042029 to produce 300 tons of seed.
“We learned how to evaluate farmer preferences
better from the Philippines team,” adds Amara Traisiri, an
entomologist working on responding to these preferences. “We
now use their method in all our field trials with farmers and we’re
getting a more accurate picture of what farmers want.” This
information caused the group to include ease of hand harvest as
another trait to consider in their breeding program, after realizing
how important it is to farmers. And the learning continued at this
month’s annual regional training meeting. “Today, we
learned a system for farmer participatory trials,” says Grudloyma,
referring to a session on planning and analyzing trial data from
CIMMYT maize breeder Gary Atlin. “With these new ideas to
direct us we’ll be able to get better results.”
Almost all Thai maize farmers grow improved hybrid
varieties, and for Ruanpeth, her priorities are clear. “Drought
tolerance is very important”, she says, and dismisses other
traits, such as yellow color. “No, I want varieties that are
drought tolerant.” She likes to try the latest hybrids and
has grown more than 10 commercial varieties. She eagerly accepts
the suggestion from Grudloyma’s team to try their new hybrids
on a small area this year.
The project has built capacity and relationships that
will endure, according to Grudloyma. “Our station is now very
good at working with drought,” he says, “and we’ll
continue cooperation and providing germplasm. We already have plans
for collaboration with China and Vietnam.” CIMMYT’s
role in providing germplasm and access to new knowledge and technologies
has been vital, as has its leadership. “It’s very hard
to get hold of germplasm from anywhere except CIMMYT,” says
Grudloyma. “It’s also difficult to come together: we
needed an international organization to coordinate and facilitate
regional interaction. With CIMMYT everything is easier.”
For more information: Kevin Pixley (k.pixley@cgiar.org)
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