Measurements focused on seasonal contribution of rice productivity to methane emission were made in three experiments conducted in Texas flooded paddy soils during 1994 and 1995 growing seasons. A total of five rice cultivars representing two distinct groups in methane emission were involved. Over a 10-week period after permanent flooding, total seasonal methane emission was positively correlated with rice above-ground biomass (r2 = 0.845, n = 11). A very strong dependence of daily methane emission on above-ground vegetative biomass (r2 = 0.887, n = 93) and on root biomass (r2 = 0.816, n = 33) was also observed. Calculation from three developmentalperiods (vegetative, reproductive and ripening) of rice plant indicated that more than 75% of total seasonal methane was emitted during the last 5-week period in concert with reproductive and ripening stages, while rice biomass production during the same period-amounted to (approx.) 50% of the seasonal total. According to the correlation of cumulative methane emission with above-ground biomass increment between every two-week interval (r2 = 0.490, n = 93, P = 0.000),the carbon released as methane is approximately equivalent to 3% and4.5% of photosynthetically fixed carbon in the biomass for low and high emission cultivars, respectively. A further investigation showed that these fractions are related to plant growth and development. Thecarbon ratio of methane emitted to net photosynthetic production during vegetative, reproductive, and ripening periods averaged 0.9%, 3.6% and 7.9%, respectively, for low emission cultivars, and 2.0%, 5.0% and 8.3%, respectively, for high emission cultivars. Moreover, the ratio was strongly dependent on plant biomass, resulting in r2 values from 0.775 to 0.907. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]