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      Assessing the ecological risks from the persistence and spread of feral populations of insect-resistant transgenic maize

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          Abstract

          One source of potential harm from the cultivation of transgenic crops is their dispersal, persistence and spread in non-agricultural land. Ecological damage may result from such spread if the abundance of valued species is reduced. The ability of a plant to spread in non-agricultural habitats is called its invasiveness potential. The risks posed by the invasiveness potential of transgenic crops are assessed by comparing in agronomic field trials the phenotypes of the crops with the phenotypes of genetically similar non-transgenic crops known to have low invasiveness potential. If the transgenic and non-transgenic crops are similar in traits believed to control invasiveness potential, it may be concluded that the transgenic crop has low invasiveness potential and poses negligible ecological risk via persistence and spread in non-agricultural habitats. If the phenotype of the transgenic crop is outside the range of the non-transgenic comparators for the traits controlling invasiveness potential, or if the comparative approach is regarded as inadequate for reasons of risk perception or risk communication, experiments that simulate the dispersal of the crop into non-agricultural habitats may be necessary. We describe such an experiment for several commercial insect-resistant transgenic maize events in conditions similar to those found in maize-growing regions of Mexico. As expected from comparative risk assessments, the transgenic maize was found to behave similarly to non-transgenic maize and to be non-invasive. The value of this experiment in assessing and communicating the negligible ecological risk posed by the low invasiveness potential of insect-resistant transgenic maize in Mexico is discussed.

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          Regulating transgenic crops sensibly: lessons from plant breeding, biotechnology and genomics.

          The costs of meeting regulatory requirements and market restrictions guided by regulatory criteria are substantial impediments to the commercialization of transgenic crops. Although a cautious approach may have been prudent initially, we argue that some regulatory requirements can now be modified to reduce costs and uncertainty without compromising safety. Long-accepted plant breeding methods for incorporating new diversity into crop varieties, experience from two decades of research on and commercialization of transgenic crops, and expanding knowledge of plant genome structure and dynamics all indicate that if a gene or trait is safe, the genetic engineering process itself presents little potential for unexpected consequences that would not be identified or eliminated in the variety development process before commercialization. We propose that as in conventional breeding, regulatory emphasis should be on phenotypic rather than genomic characteristics once a gene or trait has been shown to be safe.
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            Problem formulation in the environmental risk assessment for genetically modified plants

            Problem formulation is the first step in environmental risk assessment (ERA) where policy goals, scope, assessment endpoints, and methodology are distilled to an explicitly stated problem and approach for analysis. The consistency and utility of ERAs for genetically modified (GM) plants can be improved through rigorous problem formulation (PF), producing an analysis plan that describes relevant exposure scenarios and the potential consequences of these scenarios. A properly executed PF assures the relevance of ERA outcomes for decision-making. Adopting a harmonized approach to problem formulation should bring about greater uniformity in the ERA process for GM plants among regulatory regimes globally. This paper is the product of an international expert group convened by the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) Research Foundation.
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              Effect of volunteers on maize gene flow.

              Regulatory approvals for deliberate release of GM maize events into the environment have lead to real situations of coexistence between GM and non-GM, with some fields being cultivated with GM and conventional varieties in successive seasons. Given the common presence of volunteer plants in maize fields in temperate areas, we investigated the real impact of GM volunteers on the yield of 12 non-GM agricultural fields. Volunteer density varied from residual to around 10% of plants in the field and was largely reduced using certain cultural practices. Plant vigour was low, they rarely had cobs and produced pollen that cross-fertilized neighbour plants only at low--but variable--levels. In the worst-case scenario, the estimated content of GMO was 0.16%. The influence of GM volunteers was not enough to reach the 0.9% adventitious GM threshold but it could potentially contribute to adventitious GM levels, especially at high initial densities (i.e. above 1,000 volunteers/ha).
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +44-1344-414620 , +44-1344-416690 , alan.raybould@syngenta.com
                Journal
                Transgenic Res
                Transgenic Res
                Transgenic Research
                Springer Netherlands (Dordrecht )
                0962-8819
                1573-9368
                15 October 2011
                15 October 2011
                June 2012
                : 21
                : 3
                : 655-664
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Syngenta, Jealott’s Hill International Research Centre, Bracknell, Berkshire, RG42 6EY UK
                [2 ]Pioneer Hi-Bred International, a DuPont Business, 7250 NW 62nd Ave., Johnston, IA 50131 USA
                [3 ]Monsanto Company, 800 N. Lindbergh Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63167 USA
                [4 ]Dow AgroSciences LLC, 9330 Zionsville Rd., Indianapolis, IN 46268 USA
                Article
                9560
                10.1007/s11248-011-9560-4
                3348485
                22002083
                f83930f7-9c3e-48f2-82d7-29525a490743
                © The Author(s) 2011
                History
                : 11 August 2011
                : 15 September 2011
                Categories
                Original Paper
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2012

                Genetics
                field study,insect resistance,feral maize,ecological risk assessment,invasiveness potential

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