Trouble on the horizon for GM crops
Pests are adapting to genetically modified (GM) crops in unexpected
ways, researchers have discovered. The findings underscore the
importance of closely monitoring and countering pest resistance to
biotech crops, reported Daniel Stolte on the website UANews (University
of Arizona Office of Communications).
Resistance
of cotton bollworm to insect-killing cotton plants involves more diverse
genetic changes than expected, an international research team reports in
the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Decrease
To decrease sprays of broad-spectrum insecticides, which can harm
animals other than the target pests, cotton and corn have been
genetically engineered to produce toxins derived from the bacterium
Bacillus thuringiensis, or Bt. Bt toxins kill certain insect pests but
are harmless to most other creatures including people.
These environmentally friendly toxins have been used for decades in
sprays by organic growers and since 1996 in engineered Bt crops by
mainstream farmers.
Over time, scientists have learned, initially rare genetic mutations
that confer resistance to Bt toxins are becoming more common as a
growing number of pest populations adapt to Bt crops.
In the first study to compare how pests evolve resistance to Bt crops
in the laboratory vs. the field, researchers discovered that while some
of the lab-selected mutations do occur in the wild populations, some
mutations that differ markedly from those seen in the lab are important
in the field.
Bollworm
Caterpillars of the cotton bollworm, Helicoverpa armigera, can munch
on a wide array of plants before emerging as moths.
This species is the major cotton pest in China, where the study was
carried out. Bruce Tabashnik, head of the department of entomology at
the University of Arizona College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, who
co-authored the study, considers the findings an early warning to
farmers, regulatory agencies and the biotech industry.
"Scientists expected the insects to adapt, but we're just finding out
now how they're becoming resistant in the field," Tabashnik said.
To avoid surprises, researchers have exposed cotton bollworm
populations to Bt toxins in controlled lab experiments and studied the
genetic mechanisms by which the insects adapt.
"We try to stay ahead of the game," he said. "We want to anticipate
what genes are involved, so we can proactively develop strategies to
sustain the efficacy of Bt crops and reduce reliance on insecticide
sprays.
The implicit assumption is what we learn from lab-selected resistance
will apply in the field."
Resistance
That assumption, according to Tabashnik, had never been tested before
for resistance to Bt crops.
Now for the first time, the international team gathered genetic
evidence from pests in the field, enabling them to directly compare the
genes involved in the resistance of wild and lab-reared populations.
They found some resistance-conferring mutations in the field were the
same as in lab-reared pests, but some others were strikingly different.
"We found exactly the same mutation in the field that was detected in
the lab," Tabashnik said.
"But we also found lots of other mutations, most of them in the same
gene and one in a completely different gene."A major surprise came when
the team identified two unrelated, dominant mutations in the field
populations.
"Dominant" means that one copy of the genetic variant is enough to
confer resistance to Bt toxin.
In contrast, resistance mutations characterised before from lab
selection are recessive - meaning it takes two copies of the mutation,
one provided by each parent, to make an insect resistant to Bt toxin.
"Dominant resistance is more difficult to manage and cannot be
readily slowed with refuges, which are especially useful when resistance
is recessive," Tabashnik said.
Refuges consist of plants that do not have a Bt toxin gene and thus
allow survival of insects that are susceptible to the toxin. Refuges are
planted near Bt crops with the goal of producing enough susceptible
insects to dilute the population of resistant insects, by making it
unlikely two resistant insects will mate and produce resistant
offspring. According to Tabashnik, the refuge strategy worked
brilliantly against the pink bollworm in Arizona, where this pest had
plagued cotton farmers for a century, but is now scarce.
The dominant mutations discovered in China throw a wrench in the
refuge strategy because resistant offspring arise from matings between
susceptible and resistant insects. He added that the study will enable
regulators and growers to better manage emerging resistance to Bt crops.
"We have been speculating and using indirect methods to try and predict
what would happen in the field.
Only now that resistance is starting to pop up in many places is it
possible to actually examine resistance in the field. I think the
techniques from this study will be applied to many other situations
around the world, and we'll begin to develop a general understanding of
the genetic basis of resistance in the field."
The current study is part of a collaboration funded by the Chinese
government, involving a dozen scientists at four institutions in China
and the US.
Strategy
Yidong Wu at Nanjing Agricultural University designed the study and
led the Chinese effort.
He emphasized the importance of the ongoing collaboration for
addressing resistance to Bt crops, which is a major issue in China. He
also pointed out that the discovery of dominant resistance will
encourage the scientific community to rethink the refuge strategy.
Tabashnik said China is the world's top cotton producer, with about
16 billion pounds of cotton per year. India is number two, followed by
the US, which produces about half as much cotton as China. In 2011,
farmers worldwide planted 160 million acres of Bt cotton and Bt corn.
The percentage of cotton planted with Bt cotton reached 75% in the US
in 2011, but has exceeded 90% since 2004 in northern China, where most
of China's cotton is grown.
The researchers report that resistance-conferring mutations in cotton
bollworm were three times more common in northern China than in areas of
northwestern China where less Bt cotton has been grown.
Even in northern China, however, growers haven't noticed the emerging
resistance yet, Tabashnik said, because only about 2% of the cotton
bollworms there are resistant.
"As a grower, if you're killing 98% of pests with Bt cotton, you
wouldn't notice anything. But this study tells us there is trouble on
the horizon."
-Third World Network
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