-Caveat Lector-

Keep your fingers crossed that we don't destroy all plant life on the
planet.
flw

Your Tax Dollars At Work:  U.S. Developing Fungi to Kill
 Narcotics Plants

As part of the $2.7 billion "Western Hemisphere Drug
Elimination Act" signed into law last fall, researchers at
the USDA's Agricultural Research Services (ARS) will receive
$10 million to develop strains of mycoherbicides, or soil-
borne fungi, that can be used to eradicate opium poppies,
coca, and marijuana in the U.S. and internationally.  The
project, part of a $23 million package to enhance
eradication strategies, was sponsored by Mike DeWine (R-OH)
in the Senate and hailed by Rep. Bill McCollum (R-FL) as a
potential "silver bullet in the war on drugs."

Mycoherbicides have been used successfully in eliminating
noxious weeds, and environmental groups have encouraged
their development and use as alternatives to chemical
herbicides.  But experts warn of the risk of unintended
consequences in unleashing genetically programmed fungi on
the environment.

DRCNet spoke with George Wooten, a chemical ecologist with
the Pacific Biodiversity Institute.  "There is no silver
bullet," he said.  "Suppose this plan were not successful
enough; we would have spent a lot of money with no results.
But if it were too successful, we could end up with a
situation where it killed the entire gene from the earth.
And then we would no longer have a source of very valuable
narcotics which are used to cure people.  The risks are very
high."  Crucial pain relievers and anesthetics such as
morphine are derived from the opium plant.  Cocaine, which
is derived from the coca plant, also plays an important,
though more limited role in anesthesia.

Indeed, there are more questions than answers when it comes
to the potential risks of enlisting mycoherbicides in the
drug war.  For instance, a fungus designed to eliminate only
the target plant may work perfectly well in controlled
experiments, but there seems to be no way to guarantee how
it will behave in nature over time.  One fungus deemed
particularly promising in ARS reports is a strain of
fusarium oxysporum, a naturally occurring outbreak of which
has destroyed vast tracts of coca in Peru over the past few
years.  But other strains of fusarium are devastating to
dozens of other crops, causing wilt disease in everything
from melons to string beans.

Another concern is just how species-specific these
mycoherbicides will be.  Will a fungus have better luck
distinguishing hemp from marijuana than the DEA?
"Because these narcotics plants are defined based on legal
definitions, not biological ones," Wooten noted, "any nation
who has a different concept of what should or shouldn't be a
narcotic drug would be justified in developing such tools to
fight their own particular noxious plants.  This might
include coffee, tobacco, or other plants that have a use in
one country but are considered unacceptable in another.
That's the scenario before us, and I don't think we can
necessarily stop it.  But for the government to fund it --
it seems to be a money thing.  There's probably a USDA
branch that's in dire need of funds, and this was seen as a
positive way to go about solving problems they've recently
had in licensing similar patents to confer herbicide
resistance on plants.  This is a way for the government to
fund it, so that companies aren't incurring the financial
risk."

A spokeswoman for ARS did not return calls requesting
information on the status of the project.
DRCNet will continue to pursue this story.  Meanwhile, read
Jim Hogshire's "Biological Roulette: The Drug War's Fungal
Solution?" appearing in the Spring, 1998 issue of Covert
Action Quarterly.  The Media Awareness Project has the full
text at <http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v98/n495/a03.html>.
ARS publishes research notes on its web site at
<http://www.ars.usda.gov/>.

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