Title: The future of forest genetics
1The future of forest genetics
- Toby Bradshaw
- Department of Biology
- University of Washington
- toby_at_u.washington.edu
2Human demand for wood and fiber is increasing
- Population growth
- Lumber
- Paper
- Fuel
- More agricultural land needed to grow food for
humans less land for forests and wilderness - Biobased economy
- Biological raw materials augment and eventually
replace petroleum to achieve sustainability
3http//www.wri.org
4The Great RestorationDavid Victor and Jesse
Ausubel
Skinhead Earth
http//phe.rockefeller.edu/restoringforests/
Pre-agricultural 6000 B.C.
1990s
Great Restoration
Non-forest, non-ag
Wild forest
Increasing the yield of industrial forests is key!
Agriculture
Industrial forest
5The upside potential for yield
non-growing season 22
reflectance, respiration, etc. 21
net photosynthesis 1
- A 1 increase in conversion of solar energy to
fixed carbon will double biomass yield
non-PAR 56
6What is a GMO?
- Genetically Modified Organism
- Asexual gene (DNA) transfer (genetic
engineering/GE) - Unlimited gene pool
- Research tool
- Pharmaceuticals
- Crops (Frankenfood)
- Livestock?
- Forest trees?
- Fish?
- Humans?
7Gene transfer (transformation)
- Typical traits engineered into crops
- Herbicide resistance (e.g., Roundup Ready)
- Insect resistance (Bt toxin)
- Vitamin A (golden rice)
- Fruit firmness (Flavr Savr tomato)
8Why genetically engineer forest trees?
- Basic research to discover how trees work, and
which genes are responsible for the unique
biological features of trees - Increase wood yield and quality by accelerating
progress in applied tree breeding for plantation
forests - Improve environmental quality by restoring
endangered tree species (chestnut, elm) and by
using GE trees for phytoremediation of toxic waste
9Traits being genetically engineered in forest
trees
- Gene traps to discover genes involved in tree
growth and development
Photo courtesy of Andrew Groover, Institute of
Forest Genetics
10Traits being genetically engineered in forest
trees
- Herbicide resistance (weed control)
- Insect resistance (leaf beetle, budworm)
Transgenic
Non-transgenic
Photos courtesy of Rick Meilan, Tree Genetic
Engineering Research Cooperative
11Traits being genetically engineered in forest
trees
- Lignin reduction (reduced chemical use, waste,
and energy consumption in pulping) - Reproductive sterility (prevention of transgene
escape)
12Traits being genetically engineered in forest
trees
- Phytoremediation (removal of toxic wastes)
- Disease resistance (chestnut blight, Dutch elm
disease)
13Traits of the future
- Growth/yield (wood, fiber, renewable energy)
- Wood quality (strength, stiffness, straightness,
few knots) - Tolerance of cold, drought, salt
- Novel photosynthetic pathways
- Self-pulping wood
- Farmaceuticals
- Industrial chemical feedstocks
- DOMESTICATION
14Where are we now and where will we be?
?
?
Effect of mutations
refinement
domestication
Number of mutations
15Potential benefits of GE trees
- Accelerates tree breeding/domestication
- Increased plantation yield spares wilderness
- Tolerance of harsh environments
- Reduced use of chemical pesticides
- Improved product quality
- Novel products (e.g., pharmaceuticals, industrial
raw materials) - Economically and environmentally sustainable wood
production
16Concerns about GE trees
- Environmental risk (transgene escape, weediness,
effects on non-target species) - Corporate control of forestry
- Unnatural breaching of species barrier
- Unethical (e.g., playing God)
17Who opposes tree genetic engineering research?
- Earth Liberation Front You cannot control what
is wild. - Greenpeace moratorium on all field research with
transgenic plants - Forest Stewardship Council denies certification
to entities conducting field research on
transgenic trees
18Forest Stewardship Council
- The use of exotic species shall be carefully
controlled and actively monitored to avoid
adverse ecological impacts. - No species should be planted on a large scale
until local trials and/or experience have shown
that they are ecologically well-adapted to the
site, are not invasive, and do not have
significant negative ecological impacts on other
ecosystems.
19(No Transcript)
20From the ELF communiquè
- "Bradshaw, the driving force in G.E. tree
research, continues to unleash mutant genes into
the environment that is sic certain to cause
irreversible harm to forest ecosystems. As long
as universities continue to pursue this reckless
'science, they run the risk of suffering severe
losses. Our message remains clear, we are
determined to stop genetic engineering."
21From the ELF website
- There were a total of 137 illegal direct actions
in North America in 2001 72 of those were for
animal liberation, 51 for earth liberation, and
14 against GMO/GE. - The firebombing of CUH was the single biggest
direct action by the ELF in 2001, and the
second largest ever.
22From the ELF FAQ
Setting Fires With Electrical Timers - An Earth
Liberation Front Guide
- The ELF targets have included such issues as
deforestation (for human development of roadways,
for luxurious living and/or recreation areas, for
profit by selling or using trees, etc.), urban
sprawl, genetic engineering, natural habitat and
ecosystem destruction, the use of slave labor by
corporations and more.
23Effects of terrorism onscientific research
- Attempts to suppress academic freedom and basic
research - Increases costs of research
- Drives research out of public institutions and
into private hands - Diverts talented researchers into less
controversial areas - May negatively impact research funding
24US National Research Council/National Academy of
Sciences position on GE and conventional plant
breeding
- The same physical and biological laws govern the
response of organisms modified by modern
molecular and cellular methods and those produced
by classical methods.
25Who said this?
- The time has come rich opportunity shines
forth for the timber extraction industry to
shift to tree farming on already converted land.
The cultivation of lumber and pulp should be
conducted like the agribusiness it is, using
high-quality, fast-growing species and strains
for higher productivity and profit. - From E. O. Wilson, 2002, The Future of Life.
Knopf, New York (p.161)
26Issues to discuss
- What are the trade-offs involved in the adoption
or rejection of genetically engineered trees? - Does genetic engineering differ in any meaningful
way from conventional plant breeding?
27Genetic engineering (GE) will be required for
tree domestication
- One cycle of conventional breeding takes a
decade GE takes 6 months - Outcrossing mating system prevents recovery of
recessive mutations GE can create them easily - Many vital tree functions are supported with
duplicated genes GE can knock out all copies
of a gene at once - Using genetic engineering, domestication could be
compressed into a few decades instead of
centuries of conventional breeding
28The role of genetics in agriculture
Genomics and biotech
Single-cross hybrids
Double-cross hybrids
29Potential environmental risks of GE plants
- Non-target effects (e.g., Monarch butterfly)
- Insects become resistant to Bt, making it useless
for organic farmers - Increased use of broad-spectrum herbicides
- Gene flow to wild relatives (e.g., superweeds)
- Loss of biodiversity (e.g., monoculture)
30From the ELF FAQ
- Capitalism as a target is not easily
identifiable due to it being an ideology rather
than a physical object. But forms and symbols of
capitalism can be targeted successfully the
list is endless but could include such symbols in
the U.S. as Mt. Rushmore, the Statue of Liberty,
Disney, Wall Street, etc.