---- forwarded message ----
Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2001 14:44:02 -0800
From: radtimes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: GM pollen spreads further then expected

GM pollen spreads further then expected

www.newscientist.com

Keep your distance

by Andy Coghlan
New Scientist; November 24, 2001

  Canada warns that modified crops can spread further than thought

  STRAY pollen and seed from genetically modified oilseed rape, or canola,
  is now so widespread in Canada that it is difficult to grow conventional
  or organic strains without them being contaminated. That is the stark
  message from Hugh Beckie of the agriculture ministry's Saskatoon
  Research Center, which has been monitoring GM crops since commercial
  farming began six years ago. Canada's experience provides valuable
  lessons for other parts of the world, such as Europe, that don't yet
  allow commercial production. It suggests that GM and non-GM varieties of
  some crops might have to be kept far apart or even grown in separate,
  designated zones. "If we move towards quite a lot of GM growing, there
  would have to be some sort of zoning," says Jeremy Sweet of the National
  Institute of Agricultural Botany in Cambridge.This is already done to
  prevent contamination of elite conventional strains of sugar beet and
  potatoes, he says.

  Beckie, who spoke at the Weeds 2001 conference in Britain last week,
  stresses that much depends on the particular crop. Plants such as wheat
  and soybeans are relatively safe from contamination because they usually
  pollinate themselves. But oilseed rape accepts pollen from neighbours.
  Experiments show that pollen from GM oilseed rape travels much further
  than expected, Beckie says. "Our studies have shown that pollen can
  travel at least 800 metres." That's eight times further than the
  official Canadian "safe" separation of 100 metres for rape grown to
  supply pedigree seed. And it's four times further than the country's
  175-metre separation for rape grown to supply oil or food.

  Only 0.07 per cent of plants at 800 metres were pollinated, but there
  was a long "plateau" between 50 and 400 metres where contamination was
  about 0.2 per cent, dangerously close to the accepted 0.25 per cent
  contamination limit for elite seed. Beckie says that there's "a good
  chance" he will recommend extending separation distances. What's more,
  some GM plants are surviving in fields from year to year because they
  have acquired resistance to more than one weedkiller by crossing with
  other GM strains. Such "stacked" resistance is easily managed with other
  herbicides, but only if farmers know the
  problem exists.

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