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Getting rich on public land: commercial bioprospecting in the National Parks.


The hot springs at Yellowstone National Park Yellowstone National Park, 2,219,791 acres (899,015 hectares), the world's first national park (est. 1872), NW Wyo., extending into Montana and Idaho. It lies mainly on a broad plateau in the Rocky Mts., on the Continental Divide, c.  are worth billions. Commercial researchers have only begun to examine the multitude of heat-loving microorganisms or "thermophiles" living in Yellowstone's 10,000 highly acidic geysers The examples and perspective in this USA may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
This is an alphabetical list of notable geysers, a type of erupting hot spring:
, hot-springs and boiling mudpots, but private companies have patented their findings. They're using the organisms to develop HIV tests, detergents, plastics and DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 fingerprinting--and reaping huge profits. So far, they haven't been compelled to share the wealth.

The National Park Service (NPS NPS National Park Service
NPS Naval Postgraduate School
NPS Net Promoter Score (customer management)
NPS Non-Point Source pollution
NPS Native Plant Society
NPS Norfolk Public Schools (Virginia) 
), looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 new dollars to support its research and conservation initiatives, has proposed "bioprospecting" for a fee, ensuring that research done at the parks comes back to the federal government in the form of a percentage of the profits. Environmental groups, including the Edmonds Institute, the Alliance for Wild Rockies, the Rockies, the: see Rocky Mountains.  Wild-West Institute and Wilderness Watch, have joined together in opposition, claiming that bioprospecting undermines the mission of the national parks This is a list of national parks ordered by nation. Africa
See also:
  • Algeria
  • Botswana
  • Chad
  • Ethiopia
  • Gabon
  • Kenya
  • Madagascar
  • Morocco
  • Mozambique
  • Namibia
 and opens the door to potential harm, done in secret, to the parks' fragile ecosystems.

Beth Burrows, Edmonds Institute president and director, is an outspoken critic. She uses the term "bio-piracy" to describe the way companies have harvested microorganisms for profit. "It sounds like we're mining for living organisms in the parks," Burrows says. "The parks have a very special mission to preserve and conserve for future generations. That's the legal mission of the parks."

Eight years ago, Edmonds, a nonprofit committed to protecting ecosystems, was one of the lead plaintiffs in a lawsuit against NPS. The Institute had uncovered a deal between Yellowstone and Diversa Corporation in which the latter would be allowed to remove organisms and develop patentable products from Yellowstone in exchange for a yearly fee and a percentage of profits. That lawsuit led to a Draft Environmental Impact Study (DEIS), released last November, concluding that NPS would continue to permit commercial bioprospecting as long as the government agency shares in the benefits, an amount to be determined based on the success of a product.

Gerry Gaumer, a spokesman for NPS, says, "This [bioprospecting] is already going on through permitted activity. We're requiring researchers to enter into an agreement before the results turn into monetary gain. This is not about the commercialization of the parks. Not a lot is going to change."

The money the parks stand to gain is significant. In the late 1960s, developers isolated a heat-stable enzyme from the Mushroom Pool in the Lower Geyser geyser (gī`zər) [Icel.], hot spring from which water and steam are ejected periodically to heights ranging from a few to several hundred feet.  Basin at Yellowstone. Over a decade later, researcher Kary Mullis at Cetus Corporation developed the polymerase chain reaction polymerase chain reaction (pŏl`ĭmərās') (PCR), laboratory process in which a particular DNA segment from a mixture of DNA chains is rapidly replicated, producing a large, readily analyzed sample of a piece of DNA; the process is  (PCR PCR polymerase chain reaction.

PCR
abbr.
polymerase chain reaction


Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) 
) from the enzyme, for which he won the Nobel Prize Nobel Prize, award given for outstanding achievement in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, peace, or literature. The awards were established by the will of Alfred Nobel, who left a fund to provide annual prizes in the five areas listed above. . As a genetic research tool, PCR has been groundbreaking, allowing the replication of DNA to detect diseases, identify genetic fingerprints, clone genes and test for paternity The state or condition of a father; the relationship of a father.

English and U.S. Common Law have recognized the importance of establishing the paternity of children.
. PCR technology has led to billions of dollars in revenue for its developers, none of which benefits the parks.

Scott Silver, the executive director of the preservation group Wild Wilderness since 1991, was once a scientist in the biotech industry and says bio prospecting usually has little impact on the environment. "It's dipping a test tube into the hot pool or spooning dirt into a plastic bag," he says. But allowing bioprospecting could lead to more insidious alteration of the environment, he says. "Instead of taking a sample out of the hot pool and hoping enzymatic activity can be found," Silver says, "you can enrich the environment to encourage out-production of these organisms." A hot pool is the perfect place to grow starch, for example, but doing so could permanently alter the ecology.

At NPS, Gaumer insists that all the research is closely monitored. "Before someone gets a permit, we have to assess it," he says. Nonetheless, George Nickas, executive director at Wilderness Watch, says any commercial bioprospecting presents the danger of introducing foreign organisms into the environment, and it's not a risk worth taking.

Burrows is concerned about a lack of transparency. The NPS proposal recommends using a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement “CRADA” redirects here. For other uses, see CRADA (disambiguation).

A Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) is an agreement between a government agency and a private company to work together.
 with interested companies, as was done with Diversa. In such agreements, any part of the research can be declared confidential. The public would not even be able to file a Freedom of Information (FOI FOI Freedom Of Information
FOI Totalförsvarets Forskningsinstitut (Swedish Defence Research Agency)
FOI The Swedish Defence Research Agency
FOI Field of Interest
FOI Full of It
FOI Fruit of Islam
) inquiry to access the information. "Under FOI, proprietary information is exempt from public view," Burrows says.

The environmental groups also worry that by allowing bioprospecting for a profit, the very notion of what a national park is will change. "We think this will injure the existence value of the park," Burrows says. She means that parks are part of the national consciousness; there for public enjoyment and education, and commercial gain cheapens them. As Nickas puts it, "The parks weren't set aside to serve the economy."

As the ethical dilemma over commercial bioprospecting continues, the microorganisms are simmering in their hot bubbling baths, waiting to inspire the next great biotech discovery for someone's significant profit. CONTACT: Parks Not For Sale, www.parksnotforsale.org; The Edmonds Institute, (425)775-5383, www.edmondsinstitute.org; Wilderness Watch, (406)542-2048, www.wildernesswatch.org, National Park Service, www.nps.gov.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Earth Action Network, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:CURRENTS
Author:Belli, Brita
Publication:E
Date:Mar 1, 2007
Words:833
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