FROM THE CATALOGUE OF BIZARRE IDEAS: A Fungus to Wipe Out Coca -- and Corn,
and Tomatoes, and Peppers, and ...
Everglades Too Precious For Fungus Experiment -- So Let's Try Colombia's
Jungle
Daryl Lease is a free-lance writer in Bradenton, Florida.


In recent weeks, U.S. drug czar Barry McCaffrey has tried to wheedle promises
from Hollywood to make films preaching the horrors of drug use. Meanwhile, he
and an unusual team of collaborators have been hurriedly writing an anti-drug
script of their own.

Their drama -- let's give it a blockbuster title, Fungus! -- is set in the
Amazonian jungle, and McCaffrey's people describe it as a can't-miss
international hit. Others, however, are making a persuasive case that it'll
be a B-grade horror flop, more deserving of a title like, Hey! Who the Hell
Ate the Rainforest?

The fungus in question is Fusarium oxysporum, a relatively unknown actor with
a voracious appetite for marijuana, cocaine, heroin and -- according to some
critics -- just about anything else that's leafy, green and unable to pull up
roots and flee.

Last summer, Florida officials briefly, and rather theatrically, pondered
experimenting with this soil-borne fungus as an alternative means to combat
the state's thriving marijuana trade. Promoters touted it as a lean, mean
weed-eating machine, but skeptics pointed out -- accurately -- that precious
little is known about what else it might munch up in the process.

Interestingly, the fungus foes included David Struhs, Governor Jeb Bush's
appointee to head the state Department of Environmental Protection and a man
known for not letting the environment get in the way of a business deal.

Early in the debate, Struhs joined a chorus of opponents, including a
predictably offkey contingent of potheads, in denouncing the fungus plan as
risky and perhaps foolhardy. He warned Jim McDonough, who'd traded in his
title as director of strategy for McCaffrey to become Florida's drug czar,
that the Fusarium species is "capable of evolving rapidly" and may prove
"difficult, if not impossible, to control."

"The mutated fungi," Struhs wrote, "can cause disease in a large number of
crops, including tomatoes, peppers, flowers, corn and vines, and are normally
considered a threat to farmers as a pest, rather than as a pesticide."

In the steamy soil of Florida, the fungus could live for decades. We've been
down this road before -- in several notorious attempts to put species from
other countries to work in the United States, we were startled to discover
that the plants take on wildly different personalities in our environment.

Kudzu was originally introduced to the southern United States from China as a
natural means of erosion control; it's overwhelmed native species. Punk
trees, or Melaleuca quinquenervia, were imported to help dry up the
Everglades back when some folks thought that was a dandy idea; the trees
marched relentlessly onward and continue to suck up water wherever they
please.

"I personally do not like the idea of messing with Mother Nature," said Bill
Graves, senior biologist at the University of Florida Research Center, told
the New York Times last summer, shortly before state officials shelved the
idea. "I believe that if this fungus is unleashed for this kind of problem,
it's going to create its own problems. If it isn't executed effectively, it's
going to target and kill rare and endangered plants."

Fast forward to this summer, as the Clinton administration and Congress
prepare to send a $1.3 billion anti-narcotics aid package to Colombia. The
package, much to the surprise of many who witnessed the Florida debate, is
wrapped tightly with a string -- $3 million to test the effectiveness of
Fusarium oxysporum on Andean coca bushes.

McCaffrey and other supporters of the experiment hope it will demonstrate
that the mycoherbicide, or fungal herbicide, is safe and can quickly be put
to work wiping out Colombia's estimated 300,000 acres of coca.

There have been at least two instances of the fungus laying waste to coca
plants. In the 1970s, Coca-Cola began growing coca in Hawaii to use in its
flavoring process, but the crop was destroyed by a fungus later identified as
a strain of Fusarium oxysporum. In 1992, Peru's cocaine producers lost
thousands of acres to the fungus.

The fungus has long held the attention of anti-drug warriors, who constantly
find themselves under fire by environmentalists and health advocates for
aerial spraying. (Lately, the U.S. has been spraying glyphosate, sold at your
local home-and-garden supply store as Roundup.) During the Cold War, both
U.S. and Soviet governments secretly tested Fusarium oxysporum for use in
their own drug wars.

Not all Colombian officials are thrilled with playing host to a killer
fungus. Within days of a report by the New York Times this month about the
experiment, Colombia's environmental minister, Juan Mayr, fired off a letter
to the editor saying he opposes the tests "because any agent foreign to the
native ecosystems of our country could present grave risks to the environment
and human health."

Others echo his fears. "If it's bad for [Florida], why is it good for us?"
Colombian Senator Rafael Orduz recently asked the Miami Herald. He also
questions stipulations in the aid package that would make Colombia solely
responsible for any problems that arise during testing, the Herald reports.

In a lengthy and ground-breaking piece in its May issue, Mother Jones
magazine recounted, among other things, research indicating that the same
strain of fungus that wiped out the coca plants in Peru also killed banana
and other food crops. Writers Sharon Stevenson and Jeremy Bigwood also raised
alarms about the U.S. government's supposedly reassuring claims that the
fungus will attack only plants within the genus Erythroxylum -- a genus that
includes more than 200 plants besides coca.

McCaffrey's office says more than 100 species of plants have been tested with
the fungus and none has been affected. But that's only a tiny fraction of
species contained in the Amazon jungle, the second most biodiverse region in
the world.

In addition to the environmental concerns, opponents in Colombia and
elsewhere have pointed to studies indicating that the fungus can be toxic to
humans under some circumstances. Drug czar McCaffrey's office contends that
the toxins would affect only "immune-suppressed cancer patients whose defense
levels were very low, making them vulnerable to almost any microbe." Those
folks, McCaffrey's report says, would be hospitalized or quarantined and thus
out the way during spraying.

Despite pleas to stop McCaffrey's blockbuster production, the experiment at
this point appears to be a done deal. The idea has the backing of the White
House, the Republican leadership in Congress, and the U.N. Drug Control
Program. And, for the most part, Colombian officials are eager to get that
$1.3 billion aid package.

The cheering squad now includes at least a few Florida politicians.
Representative Bill McCollum, a Republican who hopes to win his party's
nomination for the Senate this fall, recently told the Associated Press that
the fungus "could be the silver bullet" in the drug war.

Perhaps McCollum is correct, and Fusarium oxysporum will be one of those rare
instances in the history of government where the law of unintended
consequences will be temporarily suspended. Maybe we really are looking at
major turning point in the war on drugs.

In an event, we should be sure to bring plenty of extra popcorn to
McCaffrey's show. The fungus may well appear on our doorsteps in mid-viewing
-- with a really bad case of the munchies.


http://tompaine.com/opinion/2000/07/21/1.html

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