The not-so-deadly Bt corn
Kondla, Norbert FOR:EX
Norbert.Kondla at gems3.gov.bc.ca
Thu Aug 30 11:48:34 EDT 2001
Interesting results and not surprising. Very refreshing to see some common
sense used viz how much pollen a caterpillar is likely to eat in the natural
environment rather than a lab. Those who raise the "X bad thing could
happen" argument should learn to reflect on whether or not it is plausible
rather than only theoretically possible. Many things are possible. Martians
could visit the planet Earth and turn the Mississippi River into maple syrup
:-) Yes, I do not blindly swallow the 'bad things that could happen'
argument. Others are welcome to continue doing so.
-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Cherubini [mailto:monarch at saber.net]
Sent: Wednesday, August 29, 2001 11:15 PM
To: leps-l at lists.yale.edu
Subject: Re: The not-so-deadly Bt corn
Monday August 27 7:08 PM ET
Study: Biotech Corn OK for Monarchs
By MAURA KELLY, Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - A new study found that pollen from genetically
altered corn poses little risk to monarch butterfly larvae, contradicting
previous findings that led to calls to curb the spread of bio-engineered
crops.
The larvae digest the pollen when they eat milkweed. A 1999 lab study
at Cornell University showing that pollen from the corn could poison larvae
caused a public outcry in Europe and rallied environmentalists to demand
limits on the crops.
But the latest study, which will be discussed Wednesday at a meeting
of the American Chemical Society, found that the larvae usually do not
eat enough pollen for it to harm them.
``It's a negligible risk at best. They must consume considerable amounts
of pollen to show an effect, and that amount of pollen rarely exists in
nature,''
said Mark K. Sears, chairman of the Department of Environmental
Biology at the University of Guelph in Canada.
Sears and a team of scientists looked at how far pollen traveled in a
cornfield, if monarch larvae were exposed to it and how much of it
the larvae typically ate. The research, funded mostly by the Canadian
government, took place on corn fields in Canada, Iowa, Maryland and
Minnesota between 1999 and 2000.
The scientists saw no adverse effects except when larvae ate
about 4,000 pollen grains. At that point, they began to eat and gain weight
more slowly than larvae that ate corn pollen that was not genetically
altered.
The symptoms suggested that their stomach linings were breaking
down, Sears said.
However, because there is an average of only 120 pollen grains per square
centimeter of a milkweed leaf, ``it's highly unlikely that larvae are going
to
be exposed to that much pollen to cause a measurable effect,'' Sears said.
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