Title: Ecology of Transgenic Crops
1Ecology of Transgenic Crops
- ??? (Ayo)
- ???? ??????? ??
- http//mail.nutn.edu.tw/hycheng
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2003/10/3 ????
3No ????
4Ecology of Transgenic Crops
- Genetically engineered plants might generate weed
problems and affect non-target organisms, but
measuring the risk is difficult. - ???? Marvier, M. (2001) Ecology of transgenic
crops. American Scientist 89(2)160-167.
5???????
- On May 20, 1999, a short article in Nature called
attention to a potential ecological problem with
a genetically engineered, or transgenic, crop. - Losey and his colleagues at Cornell Univ.
reported that a variety of transgenic corn could
kill the larvae of monarch butterflies.
6Fig. 1. Monarch caterpillars feed on a milkweed
leaf dusted with pollen from corn that was
genetically engineered to resist pest. Plant
breeders can transfer a gene from a bacterium
called Bacillus thuringiensis into corn, which
causes it to produce an insecticidal compound,
commonly called Bt toxin.
Losey and his colleagues found that only 56 of
the monarch larvae survived when fed milkweed
plants coated with transgenic corn pollen,
whereas 100 of larvae survived when the plants
were coated with non-transgenic corn pollen.
7??? vs. ???
- Opponents of transgenic crops help up the report
as evidence of the potentially devastating
environmental impact. - Proponents largely dismissed this
laboratory-based research as unrepresentative of
conditions on real farms.
8???????
- Genetic engineering makes it possible to transfer
genes from virtually any species animal,
bacteria, plant or virus into almost any other
species, no matter how unrelated the two species
might be. - ??????? ?????????????,???????(Monsanto ??)?
9???????????
- ?????????????????,?????(???????)?
- ???????????(allergens)?????(carcinogens)??????,??
??pests,?non-target species???,disruption of
ecosystem processes? - ??,????????,????????????
10??????????!
- In 1996,??????????????????430????
- In 1998,??????? 6,950????
- With such rapidly in creasing use of transgenic
crops, scientists and society must weigh whether
the potential benefits outweigh the potential
risks.
11????,more than ???
- Do transgenic crops pose different risks from
those common to crops created through traditional
methods of plant breeding? - Genetic engineering can create many more
combinations of genes and new traits than can
traditional breeding. - This greatly enhanced novelty diminishes anyones
ability to predict the safety of a transgenic
organism on the basis of past experience.
12DDT???
- Scientists and manufactures considered DDT
totally risk-free when first marketed in the late
1940s, and data that documented ill effects took
nearly 20 years to surface. - Similarly, major problems might result from
transgenic crops over time.
13Fig. 2. DDT gets praise from an advertisement in
the June 30, 1947, issue of Time.
14DDT ????
- DDT Dichloro-Dipheny-Trichloroethane
- ??-??-????
- DDT??????
- ???????1874?
- ?1939?,????????? (Paul Muller)
- ?????????1940?????
- 1948? Paul Muller ???1939??????????????
15DDT ????
- ?????,????????????,?1959?????,????8,000???
- 1959??,????????1972???????(???????,??)
- ???30?,????????13?5???DDT,????????
16DDT??????
- 1947??,DDT??????????
- 1957?,???????DDT?????,???????
- 1962?,Rachel Carson ?Silent Spring
- 1963?5?,????????????DDT????????
- 1967?,DDT??????????
- 1972?6?14?,???9,312?(??125?????)???,??350???????,?
?????????,?????
17Insect-resistant transgenic crops
- Creating new weeds
- Troubles for non-targets
- What is significantly safe?
- Setting standards for sampling
- Dealing with uncertainty
18Creating new weeds
- The release of organisms with novel phenotypes
bears similarities to the introduction of
non-native species. - ???????,?????,??????(weeds),????????????
- ?????,???????????,?????
- Hybridization between a transgenic crop and a
related non-crop plant can spread novel traits to
additional species.
19Fig. 3. Purple loosestrife ranks as one of the
most economically costly and environmentally
destructive examples of non-native species.
20Fig. 4. Invertebrate herbivores can limit plant
reproduction. This graph represents the pooled
results from many experiment on the impacts of
invertebrate herbivores on plant-reproductive
performance.
?????,production of flowerers, fruits or seeds
??,?????25??
21Troubles for non-targets
- ??
- a plant that is toxic to Colorado potato beetles
could conceivably also be toxic to non-pest
beetles or to beetles that actually benefit
farmers, including ladybird beetles. - Losey and his colleagues studied the effects of
pollen produced by transgenic corn that resists
lepodopteran pests.
22 ?Bt corn corn
????
23Fig. 5. This corn releases an insecticidal
compound (red) through its roots into the soil.
That compound can remain insecticidal for 230
days or more and could impact populations of soil
organisms. In addition, pollen from Bt corn
(blue) can travel as far as 60 meters, where it
coats the surface of non-crop plants. Non-target
insects, including monarch butterfly larvae,
consume some of the windblown corn pollen.
24What is significantly safe?
- Transgenic crops that produce insect toxins must
undergo two separate reviews of environmental
safety before they can be sold commercially in
the U.S. - 1. EPA reviews laboratory studies assessing a
crops effects on particular non-target
organisms, including pollinators, predatory
insects and, often, soil invertebrates. - 2. Sufficient field data regarding a crops
performance and safety.
25?????
- As of July 2000, the US ???????50????????14???????
???,?????Bt toxin? - ?????????Bt toxin??????????????????
26?????!
- ???????
- ??97-012-01p
- ??A variety of Bt cotton
- In experiments designed to test this transgenic
crops impact on soil invertebrates,
investigators placed four replicate batches of
earthworms with 10 worms per batch in soil that
included ground leaves from either transgenic or
non-transgenic cotton. - ??14??
27Fig. 6. The batches of earthworms exposed to Bt
cotton increased in weight on average by 49 (?).
The earthworms exposed to non-transgenic cotton
increased in weight on average by 78.5 (?).
- ????????29.5,??????????????
- ???????????????????
- ??,???????14?,????????
28Setting standards for sampling
- ??
- ??94-257-01p
- ??a Bt potato
- ????????????????????,??????????????????????,?????
?
29- ??
- The Swiss Federal Research Station found that
green lacewings, which are beneficial predatory
insects, experienced 62 mortality when fed a
diet of pests reared on Bt corn, but only 37
mortality when fed pests reared on non-transgenic
corn. - ???200?? per treatment.
- ????????? over the entire life span????
30A scientific advisory panel
- Met in December 1999 to review the EPA guidelines
and recommended the following - The agency (EPA) should consider how the data
will be used and establish an acceptable level of
statistical power. Based on these decisions,
appropriate tests and sample sizes can be
determined. - http//www.epa.gov/scipoly/sap/1999/index.htm
31Dealing with uncertainty
- Risk analysis should reveal how the public good
might suffer if new technologies backfire. - We could assume that a transgenic product is
unsafe until the manufacturer demonstrates its
safety. - Further exploration
- http//www.americanscientist.org/articles/01articl
es/marvier.html
32?????? Complexity and Uncertainty
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- ??????????,???140??? ?
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33??????????????????Stiling (1992), p.18?
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- ???? ???????? http//www.pu.edu.tw/humanity
- ?????Ayo ??? http//www1.pu.edu.tw/hycheng