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Bt Corn Risk to Monarchs Is "Negligible".


A much-anticipated report from a consortium of U.S. and Canadian scientists states that the most commonly planted forms of genetically engineered Bt corn pose only a "negligible" risk to monarch butterfly populations.

These types of corn make their own pesticides, nicknamed Bt in honor of the Bacillus bacillus (bəsĭl`əs), any rod-shaped bacterium or, more particularly, a rod-shaped bacterium of the genus Bacillus. Some bacterium in the genus cause disease, for example B.  thuringiensis bacterium that supplied the toxin's gene. The pesticide rides within corn pollen as it drifts on the wind, sometimes settling on the milkweed milkweed, common name for members of the Asclepiadaceae, a family of mostly perennial herbs and shrubs characterized by milky sap, a tuft of silky hairs attached to the seed (for wind distribution), and (usually) a climbing habit.  plants that monarch caterpillars eat.

The vast majority of the 19 percent of cornfields in North America planted with Bt corn relies on two genetically engineered strains, known as events Mon810 and Bt111. Neither has been proven to kill young monarch caterpillars under field conditions, report Mark K. Sears of the University of Guelph The University of Guelph is a medium-sized university located in Guelph, Ontario, established in 1964. While the U of G offers degrees in many different disciplines, the university is best known for its focus on life sciences, based in part on a long-standing history of  in Ontario and seven of his colleagues.

Another Bt corn, event 176, pumps out toxin concentrations in corn pollen that are 50 to 100 times those in Mon810 and Bt111, the researchers report. Event 176 corn is slated to be withdrawn from the market.

The assessment of Bt corn's threat to monarchs is scheduled to appear in the Oct. 1 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences.  (PNAS PNAS Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
PNAS Phosphate:Na + Symporter
PNAS Pensacola Naval Air Station
PNAS Philippine National Airsoft Society
). Five other papers by various combinations of the eight scientists and their colleagues will appear in the same issue.

"The take-home messages from these papers are that not all Bt corn events are alike and that not all laboratory studies predict what happens in the field," says May R. Berenbaum at University of Illinois University of Illinois may refer to:
  • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (flagship campus)
  • University of Illinois at Chicago
  • University of Illinois at Springfield
  • University of Illinois system
It can also refer to:
, at Urbana-Champaign. Berenbaum is a coauthor on one PNAS paper that focuses on event 176 corn. As a member of the National Academy,of Sciences, she sponsored the papers' publication.

Her comment evokes the origin of the consortium of researchers--in the wake of a 1999 report that up to half of monarch caterpillars in the lab died after eating pollen-dusted leaves (SN: 5/22/99, p. 324). The highly polarized A one-way direction of a signal or the molecules within a material pointing in one direction.  atmosphere surrounding genetically modified crops was hampering attempts to rationally plan and evaluate research. Fueled by public alarm, the Agricultural Research Service, which is part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, organized a research effort to investigate Bt corn's effects out in the world. Funding came from both government and industry.

These studies included toxicity tests in the lab and field. Researchers monitoring fields found that in Ontario, 62 percent of monarchs were in their plant-eating stages at a time when Bt corn was shedding pollen; the number was only 15 percent in Iowa. Using surveys of plants on farmland, the researchers found that cornfields make up about 28 percent of monarch breeding grounds. Butterflies were nearly twice as likely to lay eggs on a milkweed in a cornfield than in some other environment.

"I was surprised," says Karen S. Oberhauser of University of Minnesota (body, education) University of Minnesota - The home of Gopher.

http://umn.edu/.

Address: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
, St. Paul, coauthor of that portion of the study. "I've been studying monarchs for years and never knew that."

Putting the pieces together, the research consortium concludes that "the impact of Bt corn pollen from current commercial hybrids on monarch butterfly populations is negligible."

Despite the large amount of work invested in them, the studies leave gaps, grumbles longtime monarch biologist Lincoln P. Brower of Sweet Briar College Sweet Briar College is located on the former plantation of Elijah Fletcher and his family. Fletcher was a teacher, businessman, and mayor of Lynchburg. His wife, Maria Crawford, is credited with naming the land Sweet Briar.  in Virginia. "There's nothing on long-term effects," he says.

That's one of the points that Oberhauser raised in a document that she's filed with the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and .

She adds that there's little overall perspective on monarch population trends. Monitoring efforts have been so scant that she can't say whether the species is thriving or dwindling. That makes it hard to assess how much mortality is too much.

Berenbaum concurs. For example, she says that one of her students has completed a survey indicating that Illinois highway traffic each year kills some 27 million moths and butterflies. Yet, she says, there's no way to know whether the monarch portion of this mortality significantly affects the overall population.

The concern over Bt corn's effects on monarch butterflies has obscured other important concerns, comments entomologist Tom Turpin of Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. For example, researchers don't know what long-term effects Bt toxins might have on soil organisms, he says.

A foreign observer, longtime butterfly biologist Myron Zalucki of the University of Queensland The University of Queensland (UQ) is the longest-established university in the state of Queensland, Australia, a member of Australia's Group of Eight, and the Sandstone Universities. It is also a founding member of the international Universitas 21 organisation.  in Brisbane, Australia, comments on the strong polarities that cloud research on monarchs and Bt. "If you think it's just scientists getting together to sort out a problem, that's codswallop cods·wal·lop  
n. Chiefly British Slang
Nonsense; rubbish.



[Origin unknown.]

codswallop
Noun

Brit, Austral & NZ slang
," he says.
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Article Details
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Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1CANA
Date:Sep 15, 2001
Words:736
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