Why is rice such a water-intensive crop?

Rice is a C3 plant, and C3 photosynthesis is less water-efficient in hot or dry conditions than C4 plants, e.g. maize.
| Photo Credit: Steve Douglas/Unsplash
Second, the plant needs CO2 inside the leaf for photosynthesis. CO2 enters primarily through open stomata, but the same open pores also allow water vapour to leave. Third, rice is a C3 plant, and C3 photosynthesis is less water-efficient in hot or dry conditions than C4 (e.g. maize). In C3 plants, the main CO2-fixing enzyme sometimes reacts with oxygen instead of CO2. To keep photosynthesis going, C3 leaves often need to keep stomata open enough to sustain internal CO2 levels, which increases transpiration.
Finally, flooded soils are oxygen-poor because oxygen diffuses slowly through water. Most crops’ roots struggle in these conditions. Rice is tolerant, however, because it develops air-filled channels that move oxygen from the shoots to the roots.

