Deepwater rice are varieties of
rice (
Oryza sativa) grown in flooded conditions with water more than deep for at least a month. More than people in South and Southeast Asia rely on deepwater rice for their sustenance. There are two adaptations which permit the rice to thrive in deeper water, floating rice and traditional talls. Traditional talls are varieties that are grown at water depths of between and and have developed to be taller and have longer leaves than standard rice. Floating rice grows in water deeper than through advanced elongation ability. This means when a field where rice is growing floods, accelerated growth in the
internodal of the stem allows the plant to keep some of its foliage on top of the water. The
Indica cultivar is the main type of deepwater rice, although varieties of Japonica have been found in
Burma,
Bangladesh and India.