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Rice grain quality: a comparison of local varieties with new varieties under study in Ghana

Item

Title

Rice grain quality: a comparison of local varieties with new varieties under study in Ghana

Language

English

Abstract

Studies were carried out to assess the grain quality of 10 new rice varieties (breeding lines) being evaluated by breeders compared to 10 local varieties grown by farmers. Physical parameters measured were grain size and shape, thousand grain weight, chalkiness, grain colour, total milling recovery (TMR) and broken fraction. The chemical parameters measured were total protein, watersoluble proteins (WSP), amylose, ash and minerals contents. The results of the study showed significant differences (p < 0:05) in all parameters monitored between the breeding lines and the local varieties. The breeding lines had good grain size and shape (L=W –– 3.12), good endosperm appearance, milling quality (TMR––67.2%) and higher amylose content (22.87–30.78%). The local varieties however, had lower levels of brokens (22.50%), higher protein (6.78–10.50%), WSP (0.21–0.49%), ash (0.48–0.67%) and minerals (K and Ca) contents. The local varieties had higher nutrient levels than the breeding lines and this needs requisite attention in future breeding programmes.

Author

Adu-Kwarteng, E.; Ellis, W. O.; Oduro, I.; Manful, J. T.

Collection

Citation

“Rice grain quality: a comparison of local varieties with new varieties under study in Ghana,” CSIRSpace, accessed September 19, 2024, http://cspace.csirgh.com/items/show/1528.