GM Crops Create Herbicide-resistant "Superweed" 446
An anonymous reader writes "According to this article GM crops under test in the UK have cross pollinated to weeds, giving them the same resistance to herbicide as the GM crops. The article also mentions that this has been reported as occurring in Canada, which like the US is well past the test stage and allows widespread use of GM crops. What's worse, in Canada crop rotation has conferred multi-herbicide resistance to some of the weeds!"
Superweed? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Superweed? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Superweed? (Score:4, Interesting)
This has nothing to do with genetic modification (Score:2, Insightful)
Evolution within a species occurs when a great crisis happens: the particular survivor with the resistant genetics to the herbicide will breed with those genes intact. I don't believe that there was any cross-pollination or contamination from the genetically modified foods -- all I see is rhetoric that makes that assumption.
I'm really getting sick of
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Insightful)
And yes I am a scientist (biologist), and no I am no "greenie" (I am in favour of nuclear power, but next to renewable energy sources). But it is because I am a scientist that I can grab these issues. This has nothing to do with socialism or idealism, there are very rational and scientific reasons to think there are real dangers.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course not -- I don't believe anyone ever does anything out of the kindness of their heart. I have yet to meet a person (even the diehard communists I know) who don't do everything out of self sufficiency and personal profit.
Actually, they do it to put some IP in their seeds, and then prevent farmers to reuse their seeds the next year.
That's their product. Farmers don't need to buy it.
This has nothing to do with socialism or idealism, there are
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:4, Insightful)
Except that Monsanto sues farmers that have been contaminated with the RoundUp Ready crops. This is documented in many media. Moreover, they put pressure on governments of third-world countries to get a monopoly on seeds used in these countries. Farmers don't need to buy it when they have something else to buy.
Biologist or not, it doesn't mean you're a good one.
Sure. The same way, what you write may be complete bullshit. May I ask you what is your expertise about biology and GMO ? And by the way, I wish to be the only scientist to say there is a danger in the attitude of Monsanto. But if you search a little, and look at all the links that have been posted here, you may learn a lot of things.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2, Insightful)
You seem to be under the impression that free markets exist. They do not: they have never existed and never will. They are an abstraction, which is not found in nature. In particular, nothing that has happened int his world is due to "free markets".
"Free markets" are a idiological tool, like lots of other things that do not exist.
You clearly live a life of a kind that has been made possible by the very fact that those free markets do not exist.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2, Insightful)
Heh.
I am an anti-corporation businessman who believes that corporations are shills for avoiding personal responsibility. Most anarchocapitalists, like me, avoid supporting any corporation's right to exist.
If you consider that the average college graduate in the US is brainwashed into supported Keynesian economic theories, I'm sure you'd realize that I'm not brainwashed -- I study the true effects of economic man
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:3, Informative)
That is one wierd and whacky school of business you ent to there.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:3, Insightful)
You're talking to a biologist, not a sociologist. A "good scientist" is someone who applies scientific methods. Sociology is a science, it is not all science.
I find it amazing that you believe there is little or no link between GM crops and this new superweed, but you believe there is a connection between the steady cost of food and GM crops. The latter is
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:3, Funny)
Are you kidding? New species with new traits can not just randomly occur. What really happened is that our Intelligent Designer decided to create a new superweed....
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2, Interesting)
Women mostly treat their body as a temple.
Further, the farmers that wont take the product loose any chance to get good seeds anyway, in Canada farmers next door to test fields were suid while they were the victim of cross polination, the claim was, since your product is similar to ours (does not matter that we were the ones that wrecked your product) you should pay our IP tax.
I think you are a bit short sighted and close yourself from real problems that came
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:4, Funny)
Simple solution then. Just edit
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Insightful)
2)That's their product. Farmers don't need to buy it.
I agree with you, however, Monsanto has been suing farmers who have not planted Monstano's Canola seeds yet the farmer's crops get cross-pollinated from a neighbouring Monsanto Canola field. Farmers call it 'Nature', Monstanto calls it 'Theft'.
A good scientist understands that the progress of humanity came from self-reliance and cooperation for profit
Again, I see your point, but given my point above, is it really a good thing to be pursuing our profits to the point where it harms others? Where's the cooperation in that?
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:3, Interesting)
Link? Every time I've heard this alleged, it turns out it's just some cheat farmer trying to plant Monsanto product he didn't pay for, or seeds he illegally harvested and re-planted without paying for them.
Here is a link for you (Score:3, Informative)
It was the first result that came up when I did a Google(monsanto farmer) [google.com]. If you haven't tried Google before, I highly recommend it.
From the linked page:
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Interesting)
You need to get out more. And open your eyes. You are living in poverty while surrounded by riches.
That's their product. Farmers don't need to buy it.
Companies selling GM seeds have a responsibility to ensure that their product does no harm to bystanders. The free market ends where my fields begin. Unless Monstanto et al can guarantee that the modified genes will not get loose and hybridize with wildtype plants in adjacent fields they are introducing harmful genes into the environment for their own benefit.
The Monsanto Terminator gene is the perfect example of this: Terminator-infected plants will hybridize with wildtype plants in adjacent fields, resulting in progressive sterilization of surrouding farms. Monsanto will use this "marketing pportunity" in the "free market" to sell more Terminator-infected seeds to those farmers.
This is evil: doing willful harm to others for personal gain.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Informative)
Except in many cases you the consumer are prevented from having the information that would allow you to make that decision:
Link [foxbghsuit.com]
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:3, Insightful)
Great freaking zork. You must be a lawyer: your declaration that nuclear power plants have no responsibility to ensure that they don't release radiation is monstrous prima facie. Your claim that corporations have every right in the world to dump toxic waste in your neighbor's backyard because somebody is willing to pay them to do so is about as indecent as I have ever seen on slas
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't see how that is a valid assumption to make.
I personally don't know enough about chainsaw design to look at a product and deduce whether or not the chain is going to break and tear my face open or score my shin bone. I don't know enough about centrifugal clutches to make an informed decision about how long my chainsaw will last before the clutch gives out.
I'm not sure how you expect everyone to be an expert in every aspect of purchasing and if they're not, it's their fault.
You sound like you're heavily influenced by Milton Freedman and his writing, so I'll give you a quote to refute something you said earlier about manufacturers' responsibility Don't forget, for a completely free market to work, you need perfect information. I suggest you read the (lengthy) wikipedia entry on capitalism [wikipedia.org] and take some time to think about the pieces of that entry that you don't agree with.
I think it's also fair to point out that much of what's been written by 'great minds' represents ideals. Ideals rarely work out in the real world..
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Insightful)
1) I can 100% trust the motives of the people carrying out the research and field tests
2) That it is not used as a way of locking poor farmers into a product supplied by a foreign owned mega-corp
3) That some SERIOUS long-term testing is done in the lab so we can be 99.99% sure that releasing GM organisms into the food chain is not going to fuck up the food chain. (We only have 1 ecosystem remember).
4) The industry goes along with public demand to label food as GM, leaving the ultimate deicision in the hands of the public.
If governments came together to form a truly impartial and publicly funded research body to work on GM tech, that would be great, but as it is, its always the big biotech companies with their paid lobbyists and paid-off members of government that wave the flag for it. Would you trust Microsoft to re-engineer the potatoes you eat? Would you trust Sony to do it? Neither would I.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:3, Insightful)
I was going to argue against this, but then I realized all the people I knew that used to be poor farmers aren't any more. They all either rent or sold their land to corporate farms.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sorry, but it is sick. They export their perfectly good food and labor, and we give them "Burger King" in return.
-matthew
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:3, Informative)
Your assumption requires a survivor. We're talking about tailor-made chemicals designed to kill things.
If there were going to be a survivor, it'd be in the non-GM fields, where farmers would be less willing to use herbicides for fear of damaging the crop. The entire point of these GM food strains is to allow farmers to use herbicides much
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
An assumption like yours is probably what caused the problem. Think of it, assuming the chemical will kill all of something? Killing 100% or at least enough such that the remaining survivors doesn't reproduce? There aren't many times that absolute assumptions work like that.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:4, Insightful)
Between the before-market testing the herbicides were put through to make sure the chemical would be competitive and the after-market continual use over the course of decades eliminates any need for me to assume anything; it was designed to kill things, it was tested to ensure it killed things, and it is still used today because it kills things. If it were not extremely effective, it would likely not be used and this entire fiasco would be a non-issue.
And as for potential survivors, we're talking about "herbicide resistant" rather than "herbicide immune" (if you use enough herbicide, even the GM crops would be killed). If an herbicide resistant strain of a weed is going to develop independent of cross-pollenization, it is going to develop in fields where the dosages of herbicide used are survivable for the weed, and perhaps strengthened over time to be strong enough to survive in GM fields where higher dosages are used.
If a herbicide-resistant weed is going to "just happen" to pop up in a GM field, it must also "just happen" to pop up in non-GM fields and we should have seen this weed years ago (especially because of the lower dosages used). Either this is a remarkable coincidence on the verge of being miraculous, or it comes from cross-pollenization.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
We're talking about natural selection, a process which has allowed living things to copy themselves for 3 billion years on planet Earth.
So humans dreamed up a few chemicals designed to kill certain types of plants. Big deal. Plants have been ruthlessly trying to kill each other through chemical warfare for millions of years.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
Perhaps, but I think the Twentieth Century alone shows that we are far more efficient at killing things than any natural impetus or process of natural selection. It doesn't take "millions of years" for us to develop more efficient tools of destruction because we don't rely on random encounters.
Humans can fly faster, h
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
Not true. A "great crisis" is not necessary for evolution at all. It also happens when hot chicks hang out with guys like me and avoid the likes of you.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Funny)
If the chicks are hanging out with you, there must be a great crisis causing that.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:5, Insightful)
Farmers in China who grow GM crops were shown to use fewer insecticides and are living healthier lives for it, but I'm not sure where you're getting the bit about starving people from, I haven't heard of that happening. As you said, those people aren't starving for lack of food in the world (and I've never heard the "greenie" argument that there is not enough food, only that food distribution is poor -- this is called a humanitarian issue, not an environmentalist one).
It's pretty hard to find non-GM foods here in the US. I haven't noticed any difference for the better in their shelf life, either. In England, I bought all-organic for the same reason as your better half, but it's far too expensive to do that out here (in the States). When I bought the cheaper GM foods, I was surprised at how quickly they rotted, even in the fridge.
You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't: truly organic food (insecticide free) is too expensive and time consuming for us, insecticides make my wife sick (she grew up in a farming community and was thus exposed to too many nasty chemicals), and GM foods are just plain rotten.
Stick to Soylent Greenies.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:4, Insightful)
You mean in the same way that you get charged more for a tin of peas to which salt has NOT been added, right?
So are you a tool of Monsanto, or are you simply a tool?
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
I can see it, a tin of food without salt isn't likely to last as long because salt is a natural preservative, and the sales volume of that kind of food doesn't take as good advantage of mass production.
The idea of organic foods is interesting because sometimes it is the trace chemicals that matter. Trace chemicals like PCBs and others stay in our bodies and slowly build up over time. Unacceptable l
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
Whilst herbicides do put pressure on plants/weeds to evolve resistance to herbicides, in practice a total protection against the herbicide is very rare- it's much more common for the plant to evolve so as to be somewhat damaged by the herbicide, but survive; resistance rather than being immune to the herbicide. That's because natural evolution is reasonably slo
A Loss for All. (Score:2)
Modified genes from crops in a GM crop trial have transferred into local wild plants, creating a form of herbicide-resistant "superweed", the Guardian can reveal.
The cross-fertilisation between GM oilseed rape, a brassica, and a distantly related plant, charlock, had been discounted as virtually impossible by scientists with the environment department. It was found during a follow up to the government's three-year trials of GM crops which ended two years ago.
A lengthy expla
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
Evolution within a species occurs when a great crisis happens: the particular survivor with the resistant genetics to the herbicide will breed with those genes intact. I don't believe that there was any cross-pollination or contamination from the genetically modified foods -- all I see is rhetoric that makes that assumption.
Really, there are 2 believable hypothesies here. 1. The resistance came directly from cross pollination with GM crops. If true, this is a VERY serious problem. Nearly all arguments f
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
dada21 is not quoting The Article. dada21 is quoting a person quoted within the article (Dr. Jonhson), and should attribute accordingly to avoid confusion. Furthermore, the person dada21 is quoting is clearly not saying what dada21 seems to think he is saying; if you read on, the *same interviewee*, Dr. Jonhson, says:
"There is every reason to suppose that the GM trait could be in the plant's pollen and thus be carried to other
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
Greenies versus Neocons... (Score:4, Insightful)
That still does not mean GM crops are harmless. GM crops can and will cross pollenate with non-GM crops of the same species or even other related wild subspecies. They can also cause great harm indirectly. Take for example honey production. A bee does not care whether it is gathering nectar from a GM plant or an non-GM plant. Humans however do care and as a consequence US and Canadian honey producers have great trouble exporting their goods to the EU where they are classified as GM products even though the GM pollution of their honey was inderect and not something the manufacturer wanted. And before you start harping on about the fact that nobody cares about honey exports to the EU keep in mind that it is a larger market than the USA and Canada combined which makes it hard to ignore for any businessman with a modicum of sense. This sort of thing has happened to more people than just a few honey farmers and that includes farmers within the EU it self. There is a number of examples of some idiot planting GM crops on his land with the result that the crops of neighboring farmers failed to qualify for 'Organic' status due GM pollution (aka. cross pollenation with GM crops) which, in the EU, at least radically reduces the value of the crop since organic foods are increasingly sought after by consumers and GM crops avoided.
I'm really getting sick of the greenie environmentalists
While I deeply dislike the really radical greenies I am getting just as sick of you whining neocons and quite frankly I don't know which faction is worse. According to the right wing we are supposed to believe that pollution and global warming (assuming the day will ever arrive when you people are prepared to admit it can even happen) is not affecting the earth in any way shape or form, that strip mining and oil drilling in nature reserves does no harm to the environment, that due to the unchanging nature of god's devine creation extinction cannot happen and that those WMD's really are there in Iraq... somewhere.... They just haven't been found yet... I mean if the GWB says so they must be there... Right?
My other half prefers organic food, and it definitely hits her pocket book (about 400% more expensive)
While crafting a good and sneaky troll it should be kept in mind that the easiest way to screw it up is hugely exaggerating the obvious. I regularly purchase organic food and while I will admint that it is more expensive than the factory made crud, is certainly not 400% more expensive.
Re:Greenies versus Neocons... (Score:3, Insightful)
While crafting a good and sneaky troll it should be kept in mind that the easiest way to screw it up is hugely exaggerating the obvious. I regularly purchase organic food and while I will admint that it is more expensive than the factory made crud, is certainly not 400% more expensive.
One thing that is never discussed and should be is the environmental impact and quality of organically grown food. This stuff has much lower yeild per acre meaning you have to put a lot more land in cultivation (ie cut down fo
Re:Greenies versus Neocons... (Score:3, Informative)
Until recently the population of the Earth was a few million. Modern agricultural techniques (aka green revolution) were developed as a response to the need to feed populations in the billions. GM will be needed to feed populations in the 8+ billion range.
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
Do you have a cite for that? I heard that too, but when I checked out the rules, so far as I could see the rules only said 'if you grow GM crops, you have to respect the IP of the company that made the seeds'. Nowhere that I could see did they force you to buy GM crops. And there wasn't a ban on keeping your own seed stock if you hadn't bought i
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
These megacorporations don't commit crimes, they take advantage of the unlimited power of the central government. In the US we had a Constitution to limit our federal government from being manipulated by the wealthy -- that Constitution was destroyed by the common man, and this allows these big companies to perform these dastardly deeds.
The only way to stop it is to disband the f
Re:This has nothing to do with genetic modificatio (Score:2)
I am anti-patent and anti-intellectual property. I don't believe you should be able to protect a thought or an opinion, only a specific physical product. Once you sell that specific product, the new owner can disassemble and copy it to their heart's (and pocketbook's) content.
I disagree - the pro
we told you so! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:we told you so! (Score:3, Insightful)
You mispelled corporate.
Science : The More Intelligent Designer (Score:5, Funny)
I feel a little like Dr. Ian Malcolm in Jurassic Park, but for God's sake (literally) let's let evolution/intelligent\ design/or\ whatever do what it has for the past whatever years.
Next we're going to have Herbicide-resistant children...and then how are we going to control population???
Is it gene transfer? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've mostly read about GM crops that are resistant to RoundUp. It seems pretty unlikely that a plant would independently evolve resistance to that herbicide. But what about the glufosinate-ammonium herbicide this plant was immune to? Is it possible that plants could evolve resistance?
It is and it isn't.... (Score:5, Interesting)
While attending Purdue we had our favorite Monsanto rep out lecturing how he invented/patented certain processes using copper on platinum. Very fascinating from a chemistry and engineering point of view.
While their, several of my fellows ripped into him in regards to some reports that ragweed had crossed with soy to produce an herbicide resistant ragweed. Cross pollination was the cause.
The rep pointed out that all 'leftover' crops are considered weeds, and to just use another herbicide to prevent the spread. Good points.
Re:It is and it isn't.... (Score:3, Informative)
That sounds nice and simple. Reality is rarely as simple.
FTFA:"Farmers in Canada soon found that these volunteers were resistant to at least one herbicide, and became impossible to kill with two or three applications of different weedkillers after a succession of various GM crops were grown.
The new plants were dubbed superweeds because they proved resistant to three herbicide
Re:Is it gene transfer? (Score:2)
looks like it. (Score:4, Interesting)
If people have been using this weed killer for years, it would be a strange co-incidence for the resistance gene to just show up three years after GM but not one or two. Transfer by cross fertilization looks like the most likely method, especially if the find the very same patented genes. Transfer to other people's crops has already happened, much to the dislike of those who wanted nothing to do with GM and considered it polution.
Genes as IP - is Monsanto now responsible? (Score:5, Insightful)
This was predicted years ago. When Monsanto and other firms first started applying for patents for "terminator" genes (plants that will not generate viable seeds for the next years crop) and for plants specifically resistant to the use of "Roundup" many biologists warned of the danger of cross-polinization. Monsanto, et. al., and their political backers scoffed at the suggestion.
It gets far worse. Let's say a GM crop was planted next to your farm. Due to wind, bees, eh, nature the GM plants spread to your field, and soon you're growing GM plants. And then you're sued for stealing the GM crop. For the basics of wacky Monsanto GM chaos see Organic Consumers [organicconsumers.org].
So, if Monsanto, et. al. want to own and control the GM crops - and the GM crops now spread to destructive speices, what do you think the odds are that the firms responsible for creating this mess will have any liability?
Re:Genes as IP - is Monsanto now responsible? (Score:3, Interesting)
Hey, the "GM crops + Herbicide" people are just taking a cue from the big pharmaceutical companies. The patents are expiring on all of the old herbicides ....
Hmmmm ... "How do we make the farmer buy new, freshly patented chemicals from us?"
Re:Genes as IP - is Monsanto now responsible? (Score:5, Interesting)
You see, it's not as if these genetic modifications make the weed species invasive. It just gives the weed the same chemical resistance as the crop. These weeds were around previous to the use of the chemical. Now with the resistance gene they can continue to be around, even when the chemical is used. Again. Nothing to clean up.
Well, perhaps you are just worried in the abstract about some artificial genes sticking around in free-growing weeds. I'm not. Once the pesticides are no longer used, the genes will no longer confer any selective advantage. They'll then be subject to random mutations and errors and become quickly non-functional.
Re:Genes as IP - is Monsanto now responsible? (Score:3, Funny)
Naw, that's just uncreativity on the part of the farmer... He should have charged rent, say $150,000 per day per plant, for hosting other people's seedlings. Put a sign up stating this, and if you wish to participate, just allow your seeds to blow into the area.
No Problem! (Score:2, Funny)
Coca, too (Score:5, Interesting)
Returning to the topic - IIRC GM crops were eventually rejected in the EU a few years ago after a lot of hoo-haa when Monsanto et al tried to railroad them through. However as others have pointed out, wind-borne pollen doesn't tend to respect national boundaries... :(
resistance is futile (Score:2, Funny)
Re:resistance is futile (Score:2)
Mother Nature is Quick (Score:2, Insightful)
Cross polination is a myth (Score:5, Informative)
Just resistance because of stupid use of herbicides and pesticides is more likely. When using herbicides and pesticides, it is important to keep a healthy population to overgrow the by herbicides affected population. The change is pretty large that the new survivor is maybe strong against the poison, but weak compared to the original plants. This has been studied, and it is shown that by spraying 90% wiht pesticides or herbicides, and leave 10% of the original population untouched, the poison tends to be effective for a longer period (up to 10 years longer on the same pest). The only issue is, is that 10% of the harvest needs to be sacrificed to the pest.
In the end, every pest gets immune.
Oh really? (Score:2)
There's also "jumping genes" [palomar.edu], bacteria passing genes around, and forms of horizontal gene transfer [okstate.edu].
Re:Cross polination is a myth (Score:3, Informative)
GM is a myth (Score:2)
Re:Cross polination is a myth (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Cross polination is a myth (Score:5, Insightful)
And this is why farmers widely hate "advice" from scientists and researchers. If you leave 10% of a grasshopper or army worm infestation untouched you lose not 10% but 100%. Growing up on a farm I've seen it plenty to know leaving part of a field unsprayed with pesticides can be as futile as not spraying at all. For that matter I've seen the need to spray the same crop more than once to stop a pest that was widespread in an area. Herbicides are another matter.
Re:Cross polination is a myth (Score:5, Informative)
Two different species are geneticaly incompatible to produce a viable offspring.
I think you mean fertile, not viable. Plants are dirty whores. They'll have sex with just about anything and, a surprisingly large number of times, viable seeds will result. The plants that grow from these seeds are generally infertile (not unlike a mule), but not always.
As for the "only kill 90% of 'em" comment. It comes out of antibiotic research... and while I'd be wildly suspicious of anyone trying to draw a direct analogy between bacteria on a petri dish and multicellular eukarya in the wild... you don't even have the regiment right. Basically it was the comparison of the evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacterial populations where a plate was allowed to be recolonized by suriviors v. a plate that was reseeded with the wild population. The analogy to farming would be to purposefully plant non-resistant strains of undesirable plants so they could compete with any resistant varieties... not "don't kill all of 'em".
Neat Details (Score:5, Interesting)
"Farmers in Canada and Argentina growing GM soya beans have large problems with herbicide-resistant weeds, though these have arisen through natural selection and not gene flow through hybridisation. Experiments in Germany have shown sugar beets genetically modified to resist one herbicide accidentally acquired the genes to resist another - so called "gene stacking", which has also been observed in oilseed rape grown in Canada."
That's really something: even if there isn't gene transfer from related species to confer pesticide resistance, good ole evolution will take care of it.
The article includes neat things too, like superweeds causing trouble on farms (they require dirty, now heavily regulated herbicides to kill) and wildflowers (AKA "pretty weeds") picking up resistance.
Little Shop of Horrors (Score:2)
See? Even nerdish florists get a shot at cross pollination. There is hope yet for us all.
This is old news (Score:4, Insightful)
Reminds me of herbicide-resistant cocaine (Score:3, Insightful)
Pesticides have revolutionized agriculture, but like antibiotics, must be used with caution. Eventually it won't be as amazing as it once was. Older, more primitive techniques, may eventually come back into favor.
kewl. Our garden for one (Score:2)
The Limits of the Artificial Pest Control (Score:2, Insightful)
Hysterical Junk Science (Score:5, Insightful)
(1) There is nothing "super" about the weeds, they have merely acquired resistance to herbicides. They don't grow faster or crowd out crops more aggressively than their non-resistant cousins. It just as stupid as calling anti-biotic resistant microbes "super" germs. "Super" is a term meant to imply something new and unusually powerful and deadly. Every weed growing in every crop area in the developed world is largely immune to pesticides that entered widespread use over 30 years years ago. Are they "super" weeds as well?
(2) The article presents no evidence that the acquired resistance is in fact the result of cross-pollination and not natural evolution. In fact the artical says that:
"The new plants were dubbed superweeds because they proved resistant to three herbicides while the crops they were growing among had been genetically engineered to be resistant to only one."
This strongly suggest that the resistance is naturally acquired. It also doesn't seem that anyone took the elemental step of sequencing the pest-plants to see if they are actually using the same genes as the engineered crop plants. Unless someone can show that weeds contain engineered genes this article is nothing but hysterical supposition.
(3) We have been breeding herbicide resistant crop plants using radiation and mutagenic chemicals for over a century. Where is the evidence that gene transfer has occurred using the older technology? After all, nature doesn't care where the genes came from only whether they benefit the species they jump to. If acquiring herbicide resistance from crop plants was a major problem we would have seen it long ago.
(4) The supposition that crop plants will spread quickly through the wild is garbage gainsaid by centuries if not millennia or practical experience. We force crop plants to divert resources from their own survival in order to produce the plant products we need. As a result, they cannot survive in competition with natural plants that do not have the artificial overhead. If not protected from natural competition they are quickly wiped out.
Opponents of GM crops also neglect to mention that if genes jump across species as fast as they claim then the problem will be economically self-limiting. The GM crops are only used because allow the easy killing of associate pest-plants. If the pest plants acquire resistance rapidly then the GM plants lose all their economic advantage. No one will use them because they will offer no benefits for their increased cost.
Re:Hysterical Junk Science (Score:3, Insightful)
A lot of what you wrote is well thought out. However I have to agree with others that some of your conclusions are not logically correct. I would classify one of your errors in logic as "It does not follow" (il non sequitur).
For example.
While it is true that some "super weeds" have aquired immunity to herbicides it does not follow that people have not been breding in robustness
Re:The parent message brought to you... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hysterical Junk Science (Score:3, Informative)
To repeat myself, the "super" weeds are no more harmful than non-super weeds. They cannot perform the plant equivalent of running faster than a speeding bullet, leaping over tall buildings or wearing tights and cape. In fact, if you ran an "all-organic" farm that used no herbicides whatsoever, the "super" weeds would be exactly as annoying as non-super weeds. Opponents of the use of
Able to leap tall buildings.. errmm.. wait.. (Score:2, Funny)
More powerful than a trip with Jerry Garcia.
Able to beat Grand Turismo in a single round.
Look! Sitting on my couch!
It's an herb. It's mary jane. It's Superweed!
Yes, it's Superweed - strange strain from another DNA who came to my living room with powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal plants. Superweed - who can change the course of mighty lives, make people eat Taco Bell with their bare hands, and who, disguised as Purple Haze, a mild flavored hash from 1967's hippie's
More U.S. gov. corruption: No discussion of GM. (Score:3, Insightful)
Support campaign finance reform [publicampaign.org]!
McCain has the right idea [campaignfinancesite.org].
Mmm... (Score:3, Funny)
Monsanto seeds in Canada (Score:4, Insightful)
A farmer's field had some Monsanto seed mixed in with the farmer's regular seed (probably from a nearby field, seed in manure fertilizer...whatever). He was sued by Monsanto (I think they have a new name), and they won. I forget the details but I think it was similar to copyright infringement or pirating, because they owned the organism that someohow got into his field.
How they could tell which plants were their's among the millions of others, is creepy.
Re:Monsanto seeds in Canada (Score:3, Interesting)
I think allowing plant patents has really caused the small indie farmers a lot of undue stress. Realize, though, I'm not against companies getting their fair share from their products, but in nature you cannot have a perfectly closed and useful system, unless you're a planet.
Re:Monsanto seeds in Canada (Score:3, Interesting)
Not even then.
Re:Monsanto seeds in Canada - Misunderstood (Score:3, Informative)
Essentially, a part of Schmeiser's canola crop, grown from seed he had bred over many decades, was accidentally contaminated with Monsanto's GE canola, likely by seed escaping from passing trucks. Schmeiser discovered the crossbreeding, collected the seed, planted it the next year, and harvested that crop. Both the case, and Monsanto's ultimate victory, were widely misunderstood. In fact, the infringement finding solely concerned the fact that he had knowingly replanted the crossbred seed he
His Noodliness has spoken! (Score:4, Funny)
All praise the flying spaghetti monster, who though this weed, has touched us all with his Noodly Appendage!
Of course (Score:5, Insightful)
It doesn't even take sexual reproduction to do it. Plant viruses transfer genetic material from one plant to another sometimes completely unrelated one. All it takes is one or two out of billions to start the evolutionary ball rolling.
The whole point of the exercise was to sell more herbicides. By making the crops herbicide resistant you encourage farmers to change the way they farm to buy tons of the stuff. There are other methods that produce more nutrition per acre - and even per dollar - but they don't sell the product that the agrichem industry is pushing.
Re:Of course (Score:3, Interesting)
These are patented genes (Score:3, Funny)
This is the only time when I think having a lot of lawyers might be a good idea!
Is this really suprising to anyone ? (Score:3, Insightful)
The moral of the story is that Nature will always adapt no matter what us Humans do. Life will always find a way round the problems facing it. That's not to say we shouldn't try stuff out (we are questioning beings after all) but if we change conditions (via the introduction of weedkillers etc.) then eventually some sort of "stuff" will adapt to the new environment. You only need to look at how many bacteria are now resistant to antibiotics to see how things work out.
The only way we could stop life on Earth evolving to thrive in whatever conditions we create would be to blow the entire planet into little pieces. And even then I bet gravitational pull would eventually assemble some of those pieces back into a small "plantoid" which, if there were an observer to see it, would be seen to have some sort of life on it (evolved from some micro organism that was on one of the little fragments of Earth)
Natures bigger, badder, smarter, more cunning and tougher than all of the Humans that ever lived put together. We should see ourselves for what we are. A small temporary blip on the graph of "dominant species who lived on Earth".
So whilst I think the Monsantos of this world are a bunch of evil bastards who are trying to corner the world market for seed crops I'm not worried that they ever will. All that'll happen is that they fuck things up real bad for us humans. But nature won't care 'cause there's plenty more species waiting to take our place.
Or as an insect once said to me "Behold I am the mighty cockroach, give me 100 generations alone with them, and I can eat your poisons for lunch".
Re:New science (Score:5, Insightful)
Do I believe the frothing at the mouth idiot slashdot poster.
Or do I belive the experts in the field who claim that it appears that the risk of cross polination between the GM plant the the wild relative plants (ie. the plants that were once upon a time breed for better characteristics via the old fashioned "keep the plants which are better" technique to give us the crop plant) is higher than was originally thought.
Of course the slashdot poster must be the better source. The fact that they found the GM gene expressed in the wild plants is just because evolution came up with the exact same gene in a couple of years of evolution. Strange that that didn't happen decades ago really...
Re:New science (Score:2)
Actually... (Score:3, Informative)
Wheat (a grass) is a prime example of this. The wheat of today isn't the wheat of 7,000 years ago. It has, in time, been crossbred with various other grasses and taken on some of their qualities.
There are many different varieties of wheat, today, due to those cross-breedings. You can buy seed that will grow in colder climates ("winter wheat")... seed with certain resistences...
[... and here I thought my "Plant Producti
Re:New science (Score:2)
Such hybrids are almost always sterile but sometimes they aren't.
Re:New science (Score:5, Informative)
Re:New science (Score:3, Informative)
There's no such thing as completely different species being able to "cross breed".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mule [wikipedia.org]
Re:Please Kill some humans. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So how about... (Score:3, Insightful)
I mean, we know farmers get a bit lonely, and can "cross-pollinate" their sheep or other livestock from time to time - why don't we have man-sheep hybrids that are as smart as us?
How does GM corn cross pollinate with weeds to produce the same weed, with it's weedlike properties, conferring only the GM aspect of herbicide resistance?
Wouldn't you be more likely to produce
Re:No different than the weather lady "Snow tonigh (Score:3, Interesting)
Natural selection and transmission of resistance really have nothing to do with GM crops - it is go to happen anyway, whether or not the crop is modified. And of course GM modification for herbicide resistance is only one of the ways that modification is used. GM modification can be used to add new nutritional value or other charactericts as well.
So in reality this article is just a st