Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category


USA – GM ORANGE TREES BEING TESTED

GM virus-resistant citrus trees move to field trials

Source: http://www.thegrower.com/news/citrus-greening/121663929.html

The most effective method of controlling the devastating citrus greening disease that has ravaged Florida’s orange groves also may be the most controversial.

A report from the National Academy of Sciences says the most powerful long-time management tool for the bacterium that causes the disease and, possibly, for the Asian citrus psyllid that spreads it, may be genetic engineering.

“Genetic engineering, in the form of transgenic citrus or citrus inoculated with a transgene-expressing virus vector, holds the greatest hope for generating citrus cultivars resistant to (the causal bacterium and the psyllid),” the report says.

 

At the same time, the report warns that groups opposed to genetically modified foods of any kind may try to dissuade the public from turning to genetically engineered orange juice.

Meantime, efforts continue toward finding a solution to citrus greening, also called huanglongbing—or HLB—which now is present in nearly all of Florida’s citrusproducing counties but is most prevalent in the southern areas of the state.

The state’s citrus industry is well worth preserving.

“There would be great repercussions for Florida’s economy if the estimated $9.3 billion annual economic benefit of the citrus industry were to be lost or significantly diminished,” the NAS report says.

T. Erik Mirkov, professor of plant virology at Texas A&M University in College Station, has been at the forefront of the search for a genetic solution to greening disease and appears to be making progress.

“We’ve found some genes in spinach that we’ve transferred into citrus that provide resistance,” he says.

Mirkov has received a permit from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to conduct field testing of trees in Florida.

“We’ve got good results in the greenhouse, and now we’re making sure it holds up in the field,” he says.

Although Mirkov’s work appears promising, he still has a way to go. “We don’t have what I would call immunity quite yet,” he says.


TAS - POPPY GROWERS WANT GM BAN LIFTED

LEGAL CHALLENGE THREAT OVER GMO MORATORIUM

13 Oct 2013

www.abc.net.au/news/2013-10-13/legal-challenge-threat-over-gmo-moratorium/5019080

Tasmanian poppy growers say they will consider a legal challenge if the State Government refuses to allow genetically modified poppies.

The Government’s moratorium on genetically modified crops expires next year.

Yesterday, more than 100 protesters marched through Hobart, demanding the Government continue its ban on GM crops.

Despite a Government review underway, the Premier Lara Giddings wants the ban to remain.

“We do not believe that we should have GM products grown here in Tasmania,” she said.

The Deputy Liberal leader Jeremy Rockliff also says his party is yet to be convinced of the need for a change.

The Poppy Growers Association’s Glynn Williams says if the ban is not revoked, poppy growers could mount a legal action.

“We’re very confident that there are good grounds to challenge a refusal of the permit to grow GM poppies in Tasmania,” she said.

Mr Williams says genetically modified poppies would not affect Tasmania’s food or honey production.


USA – AG COEXISTENCE INPUT SOUGHT

USDA Announces Request for Public Input on Agricultural Coexistence Acts on Recommendations Made by Advisory Committee on Biotechnology in 21st Century

20 September, 2013. Source: US Department of Agriculture

www.usda.gov/wps/portal/usda/usdahome?contentid=AC21Main.xml&contentidon ly=true.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced today that the Department of Agriculture (USDA) will soon publish a notice in the Federal Register asking the public to comment on how agricultural coexistence in the United States can be strengthened.

“The Advisory Committee on Biotechnology and 21st Century Agriculture recommended that USDA support agricultural coexistence by strengthening education and outreach on this vital issue,” said Secretary Vilsack. “In response, with this notice, we are asking all those with a vested interest in coexistence to help us learn more about what coexistence means to them, how they are already contributing to it, and what more is needed to achieve coexistence. With this input, we can continue the dialogue begun by the AC21 group and find practical solutions that will help all sectors of American agriculture be successful.”

The AC21 made recommendations in five major areas regarding agricultural coexistence. In the area of education and outreach, the committee recommended that USDA foster communication and collaboration to strengthen coexistence. USDA’s notice seeks public comment to identify ways to foster communication and collaboration among those involved in all sectors of agriculture production. The comment period begins upon publication of the notice in the Federal Register and will be 60 days.

Coexistence is defined as the concurrent cultivation of crops produced through diverse agricultural systems including traditionally produced, organic, identity preserved, and genetically engineered crops. USDA supports all forms of agriculture and wants each sector to be as successful as possible providing products to markets in the United States and abroad.


AUS – THE PANIC VIRUS IS DEADLY

For GM food and vaccinations, the panic virus is a deadly disease

23 September 2013. Source: The Conversation. By Dr David Tribe and Prof Rick Roush

http://theconversation.com/for-gm-food-and-vaccinations-the-panic-virus-is-a-deadly-disease-18460

Most readers are aware of the benefits of using vaccines to boost the immune system and prevent infectious disease. Many readers will not be aware of a very different disease prevention tool: supplementing vitamins in crops through genetic modification (GM).

Anti-science opposition to both is rife; to save lives, that opposition has to stop.

The disease-prevention benefits of supplemental vitamin A were accidentally discovered in 1986 by public health scientists. They were working to improve nutrition in the villages of Aceh, Indonesia, where families are heavily dependent on rice as their main source of nutrition.

These scientists discovered that simple supplementation of infant diets with capsules containing beta-carotene (a natural source of vitamin A) reduced childhood death rates by 24%.

White rice is a very poor source of vitamin A, so the people of Aceh (like millions of poorer people in large regions of the world) suffered from vitamin A deficiency. This impaired proper development of their biological defences against infection.

We now better understand vitamin A deficiency as a disease of poverty and poor diet, responsible for near two million preventable deaths annually. It is mostly children under the age of five and women who are affected.

Many other studies carried out in several Asian, African and Latin American countries reveal the health benefits of beta-carotene supplementation in the diets of people subsisting on vitamin A-deficient staple foods.

Small wonder then that scientists internationally were outraged at the recent wanton sabotage of field trials to evaluate new varieties of rice called Golden Rice. This rice is genetically modified to contain nutritionally beneficial levels of beta-carotene.

Trenchant opposition to vaccines, and opposition to genetically modified crops, are examples of the disturbing and strong anti-scientific sentiment in many modern countries. They share some common features.

To read more http://theconversation.com/for-gm-food-and-vaccinations-the-panic-virus-is-a-deadly-disease-18460

 

 

 


AUS – HEAT GONE FROM GM DEBATE

Heat gone out of GM food debate

27 September 2013. Source: ABC Rural

www.abc.net.au/news/2013-09-27/gm-crops/4984782

 

Has the heat gone out of the genetically modified food debate?

That’s the sentiment of a science author who says people are now willing to eat GM food.

“I think the debate has been around enough that the extremes have gone out of it,” the CSIRO’s Dr Craig Cormick said.

“The hysteria has probably diminished a lot and people are no longer willing to make a gut reaction and say ‘it’s dangerous, it’s wrong, it’s against nature’.

“It’s been around for over a decade and people always go through the hot reaction at first, and then it calms down a bit and people start (thinking) ‘let’s have a discussion around this’.”

GM crops are plants that have genes removed or added to change their attributes.

In Hawaii, scientists created a GM papaya crop to overcome a deadly virus.

Cotton and canola are among the most common genetically modified Australian crops.

Dr Cormick says people are willing to eat GM foods if they understand why the crop has been modified.

He says changes in climate impact on people’s willingness to eat GM food.

“The agricultural community is talking about it seriously,” Dr Cormick said.

“We look back a couple of years during the big drought, we did find clearly in public attitudes that people were much more receptive to the idea of GM drought-resistant wheat or GM drought-resistant crops.


AUS - GM FORUM IN WA

GM Technology – The Future in Agriculture

A Free Public Event

Hosted by the Pastoralists & Graziers Association of WA (PGA)

Where: Tattersall Lecture Theatre, University of WA

When: Monday 7 October 2013

Time: 6pm

This public GM Forum is an opportunity for city-based consumers and decision-makers to further their understanding of this beneficial technology. Come and join farmers, agronomists, scientists and consumers to hear how future advances in GM technology are set to revolutionise grain growing in WA and benefit our farmers. You will hear from Australia’s leading experts in GM technology, including scientists, agronomists and farmers on why they support this safe, affordable and effective technology.

Chair: Prof Alan Robson, past Vice Chancellor of UWA

Speakers: Professor Lyn Beazley, Professor Jim Peacock, Dr John Manners, Dr Bryan Whan, Mr John Snooke, Mr Bill Crabtree

RSVP by 1 October as seats are limited.

Phone Sonya at the PGA 9479 4599 or email sonyas@pgaofwa.org.au


AUS - RADIO NATIONAL AND GM FOODS

Curse of the Frankenfoods

15 September 2013. Source: ABC Radio National

www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/backgroundbriefing/2013-09-15/4950990#transcript

Health and safety fears have restricted the growth of genetically modified foods for decades. But is a hungry world, a new generation of consumers, and the weight of scientific evidence loosening the grip of the Frankenfoods curse? Ian Walker set aside his long standing antipathy towards GM foods to investigate.

Frankenfood. It’s the meme that keeps giving…the brainchild of an English professor from Boston named Paul Lewis, whose timing was as impeccable as his rhetorical flourish was devastating.

‘Ever since Mary Shelley’s baron rolled his improved human flesh out of the lab,’ Lewis wrote, ‘scientists have been bringing such good things to life… If they [the GMO corporations] want to sell us Frankenfood, perhaps it’s time to gather the villagers, light some torches and head to the castle.’

It was 1992 and the first GM crops were coming online for approval by America’s Food and Drug Administration.  Lewis’ turn of phrase was fabulously alliterative, catchy as a car commercial, and conjured powerful notions of something amiss.  Fish genes in tomatoes.  Nature being tampered with.  Humans playing God.  Mad scientists in their labs cackling demonically as they tinkered with the very building blocks of life.

In reality, though, scientists have been tinkering with crops since the dawn of agriculture, making them more productive, resistant to disease…shorter, fatter, bigger, better.  The development of hybrid crops in the 1930s was a game-changing moment.  Then, in the 90s, ethical, environmental and food safety concerns collided with panic about mad-cow disease to produce a backlash against the notion of crop science gone too far.  Frankenfood provided the frightening metaphor that tilted the war of words wildly in favour of the anti-GM warriors.

‘It feeds into a very deep-seated and long-held fear of technology that people have,’ explains former anti-GM activist Mark Lynas.  ‘And that’s where the Frankenstein association is so powerful.  It’s something humans are doing which they shouldn’t do.  You even get this back in Genesis with the Tree of Knowledge.  So it’s a very strong myth that goes right through human culture.’

And, while scientists weren’t exactly being burnt at the stake, some took Lewis’ rallying cry to heart and found righteous cause to destroy important scientific experiments in the trial crop stages. Lynas excelled in this for nearly two decades, leading campaigns in the UK and Europe.

‘It was my life,’ he says. ‘We did all of these kinds of night-time actions against GM crops, going and chopping them down. We thought we were decontaminating the landscape. We thought what we were doing was environmentally responsible and important.’

What he didn’t realise at the time, Lynas says now, was that the real Frankenstein’s monster was not GM technology, but the reaction against it by people like him and his anti-GM cohorts.  Back in January 2013, his public apology to the Oxford Farming Conference for what he now describes as his ‘years of wrongheadedness’ made headlines around the world.  At the time, it was nerve-wracking and heartfelt.

‘I’d kind of had enough, and I just wanted to put all of my cards on the table and speak from the heart, really, and say, “I got this wrong”. I think everyone else in the anti-GM movement has got this wrong. We need to take stock of where we are and I for one am issuing an apology.’

Oxford was a fitting place for such a dramatic change of heart, being the same venue where Lynas had earned notoriety for throwing a cream pie in the face of Bjorn Lomborg, an outspoken critic of eco-apocalyptic agendas.  ‘Pies for lies,’ yelled Lynas as his underarm lob hit its target.

This time, he was asking for forgiveness from a gathering of farmers and scientists, soberly recanting ‘demonizing an important technological option which can be used to benefit the environment…I could not have chosen a more counter-productive path.’  No-one preaches better than a convert.

Lynas is a respected environmentalist, and a strong campaigner on climate change who’s written award-winning books. What irked him was the slow realisation that his passionately held views on GM were inconsistent with his reliance on evidence-based science when arguing his position on human-induced climate change.  When it came to GM, he admits, he actively ignored the weight of evidence in favour of biotechnology.

The argument he puts is that an estimated three trillion meals containing food derived from GM-bred plants have been eaten in 29 countries over 15 years without one single substantiated case of harm. ‘You are more likely,’ he quips, ‘to get hit by an asteroid than to get hurt by GM food.’

Mark Lynas was a big fish in the anti-GM pond.  Within days of his conference appearance, the video of his speech went viral.  There are now versions in more than a dozen languages, translated by volunteers in different countries around the globe.

The Lynas conversion was a revelation for journalist Jon Entine, who wrote up the story for Forbes magazine. Entine saw it as the potential dynamite it was for the ongoing GM debate. But, he says, it also pointed to a turning point in our thinking about the interface between technology and the natural world.

‘Every once in a while our society faces major inflection points when certain technologies come into play,’ Entine explains. ‘We saw it in the 1800s with the railroad, we’ve seen it with nuclear technology, we’ve seen it with computer technology. And I really think that we’re in this kind of inflection period with biotechnology.’

‘It is literally changing the way we can think about nature.  And I mean in a good sense. I don’t believe we’re violating God’s way, or any kind of natural order of things, but it is a profound experience, which is why it’s scary to many people.’

As Entine pointed out in his article, Lynas took a somewhat slow-road to Damascus. It happened over a number of years of realising that, while he was backing the claims in his various books about climate change with scientific evidence, he was doing the opposite when it came to GM.  He actively ignored the weight of the evidence in favour.  Finally, Lynas says, he had to admit his own cherished beliefs about GM turned out to be little more than ‘green urban myths’.

‘There were so many myths,’ he recounts. ‘Probably first off was this idea that somehow there’s a unique property that genes have when they belong in different species, so that there’s something carroty about carrot genes or fishy about fish genes. So I don’t think I realised that DNA is this universal code, and it’s just a number…you know, four sequences of letters, basically, is how we interpret it, and you can chop and change it between different species with actually very little impact.’

As a new convert, Lynas has joined the likes of Jon Entine, as a champion of the potential benefits of biotechnology.  His conversion has coincided, or highlighted, a new urgency to feed a hungry world, a new generation of consumers, more scrutiny of anti-GM activism, plus the weight of scientific evidence showing it is safe.

Lynas makes the case strongly that it’s time for scientists to speak out about the benefits of biotechnology.  For too long, he says, they’ve been cowed by the strident fear campaigns around Frankenfood.  And, it seems, some are fighting back and talking up a new phase of the technology.  Like Australia’s Professor James Dale.

‘We’re just starting to see the revolution,’ says Dale, the Director of the QUT’s Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities.  ‘Virtually all of the really big crop genomes have been sequenced, we’re now starting to identify what genes in those genomes are going to be really useful.’

The prospects and potential of what’s to come has been dubbed ‘Biotech Version 2.0’.  And, Dale is convinced, it’s likely to further sway the debate.

‘A lot of it is going to be targetted towards the things that we’re really concerned about, with climate change, with drought, with flooding, submersion. So we’re starting to see those traits coming through and the next generation of GM crops are going to be of much greater benefit to humanity than round one.’

Dale’s Banana 21 Project is a case in point. It’s funded by the Gates Foundation and is tackling Vitamin A deficiency in some of the poorest parts of Africa by enriching a staple food—in this case, bananas for Uganda—via GM. 

It might help save the 670-thousand or so kids who die from micronutrient malnutrition every year, and half as many again who go blind.  These genetically-modified ‘golden bananas’ have been developed in Australia and Professor Dale claims the results so far are very promising.

‘We have provitamin A Cavendish bananas with double our target level of provitamin A, so that’s fabulous. We now know which genes to use and which promoters to use. We transferred that technology to Uganda, and they now have their bananas in the field. Just very recently they identified a line which also has double the target level of provitamin A.  It’s really exciting, so we’re now moving into development phase.’

The project’s on track to produce enriched bananas ready for human eating trials by next year.  But not if some of the NGOs in Uganda have their way.  Lynas has just returned from a visit there with some hair-raising tales of treachery by anti GM activists.

He says he’s heard stories from local MPs who have had activists going into their Muslim constituencies telling people that the scientists are putting pig genes into bananas—the bio-fortified and the bacteria-resistant bananas—which you wouldn’t be allowed to eat as a Muslim.

‘Literally, people have been going crazy about this,’ Lynas reports.  ‘There’s almost been violence breaking out. So, the anti-GM activists have stooped so low as to cause religious violence in order to stop this technology.’


AUS – GM BANANA RESEARCH

GM bananas: from nutrition to disease resistance

Source: www.freshfruitportal.com/2013/08/23/gm-bananas-from-nutrition-to-disease-resistance/?country=others

This article outlines biotechnology research underway involving bananas (vitamin enhanced and disease resistant) led by Professor James Dale at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT).

Professor James Dale and his team at the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) have come far since gaining support from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF) in 2005. Initially focused on vitamin-rich genetically modified (GM) bananas for growers in Uganda, work has extended to India with disease resistance thrown into the mix, while Dale mentions the possibility of collaboration with Nigerian and Indonesian scientists in the future. Catching up with him in Brisbane, www.freshfruitportal.com hears why transgenic bananas may face less resistance than other GMO crops, and their potential if consumers accept the technology.

…“In the early 1990s we decided we were going to get involved in genetic modification. I should say that was before anybody said that it was a naughty thing to do – we thought, ‘wow, what a fabulous opportunity to actually improve bananas’, and there’s a huge number of vegetatively propagated crops which you can’t breed from the already accepted cultivars.

This fact has likely been instrumental for the establishment of QUT’s GM field trials south of Innisfail in North Queensland; the heart of Australia’s banana-growing district.

“We invited any of the banana growers who wanted to come before we planted the field trial, and we went through everything. It took a couple of hours, and they were really comfortable with what we’re doing,” he says.

“There’s no threat because there’s no transgene flow.”

Disease resistance

Dale says his team of 15 people is still working on resistance to Bunchy Top but hasn’t “quite got there yet”, and has also developed a way of controlling Panama Race I – which wiped out previous staple banana variety Gros Michel – through stress tolerant genes.

“For the original genes we’d put in, the best one was from a nematode and that gave us a hint of what we should do, and then we went and looked for the plant equivalents and we’ve been able to use those.

“That’s one strategy. Another is we’ve gone to a wild diploid banana called musa acuminata [spp.] malaccensis which grows in Indonesia and Malaysia. Some of those plants are absolutely immune to Tropical Race IV.

“There are about 25,000 types of genes, so it’s needle in a haystack type of stuff. So we’ve got to identify the right gene; we haven’t got the results from the field trial in the Northern Territory yet.

“Because it’s a slow-forming disease, we’d want to have the results probably by the end of next year. We’d be confident if we had lines there that are still standing up, and none of them are diseased, that there’s real resistance there.”

He adds that this variety is also resistant to Black Sigatoka, but his team is not working on that fungus.

“We know that malaccensis is also resistant to Black Sigatoka, so that will come. And it would be interesting to see how some of the big banana companies cope with that, when they’d say, ‘gee, we wouldn’t have to spray if we had these GM bananas’.”

Nutrition for the developing world

Dale’s work received a boost in 2004 when the BMGF put out a call for expressions of interest around grand challenges in global health.

“Most of those global challenges were new vaccines, antibiotics and the control of insect vectors of human diseases; there was one grant challenge nine, which was to develop staple crops with a complete set of micronutrients.

“We’d already started to work with the National Agricultural Research Organization in Uganda so I suggested we make an expression of interest.

“In Uganda their staple food is bananas, and in that whole region there’s very high banana consumption, very high levels of Vitamin A deficiency, and very high levels of iron deficiency; anemia.”

QUT received the funding to collaborate with their Ugandan counterparts, and Dale says “remarkable” progress has been made since then.

“So we’ve now got bananas with more than double our target levels that we wanted for provitamin A.”

He says bananas already have vitamin A through beta-carotene and alpha-carotene, but genetic modification has allowed the scientists to augment the level.

“We were able to take the genes from one of them [beta-carotene] that makes very large amounts and put that banana gene into East African Highland Bananas and into Cavendish.

“The whole issue of vitamin deficiency is really complex – micronutrient deficiencies particularly. There is still this very poor population that don’t buy food and don’t access health clinics, and that can be anywhere between 30-50% of the population in developing countries.

The first field trial for Vitamin A was in 2009, with a plan of developing the technology in Australia and then transferring that technology but not the plants to Uganda.

“Now that project is moving into the development phase where we can go and develop an elite line that we’ll take all the way through to farmer release in Uganda, and that will be available to other countries in the region if they want it.

He adds the next part of the Ugandan project is to increase iron levels, which is “much harder”.

“But we’re getting there. We’ve got a 50% increase but we actually want a 400% increase. We’ve got our next field trial in Australia already happening.”

On the back of the Ugandan collaboration’s success, QUT was approached by the Indian government to work on a similar project with its Department of Biotechnology.

“They wanted disease resistance as well, which we put in – they want resistance to bunchy top and Panama wilt.”

 


INT – STEM RUST RESISTANCE GENE DISCOVERY

19 August 2013. Source: University of California, Davis

http://news.ucdavis.edu/search/news_detail.lasso?id=10655.

A new gene that will equip wheat plants to resist the deadly stem rust disease has been discovered by an international team that includes plant scientists from Australia, United States, and China

The research team, which included co-author Jan Dvorak, a professor and wheat geneticist at UC Davis, succeeded in cloning the Sr33 gene, known to exist in Aegilops tauschii, a wild relative of common bread wheat.

“We are hopeful that the Sr33 gene and the Sr35 gene, which our colleagues at UC Davis helped to isolate, can be ‘pyramided,’ or combined, to develop wheat varieties with robust and lasting resistance to wheat stem rust disease,” Dvorak said.

The discovery of genes that confer resistance to wheat stem rust disease is vitally important for global food security, as a new, highly aggressive race of the fungus that causes wheat stem rust appeared about a decade ago in Africa and has been spreading from there. That new UG99 race, which causes rust-colored bumps to form on the stems and leaves of the wheat plants, threatens global wheat grain production.

Identification and cloning of resistance genes is expected to enable plant breeders to use traditional breeding techniques to develop new wheat varieties that will be resistant to the new strain of wheat stem rust disease, before it grows into a global pandemic.

Lead author on this study was Evans Lagudah from CSIRO Plant Industry.


PHILIPPINES – GOLDEN RICE TRIAL VANDALISED

Malnutrition fight not over, Golden Rice research continues

8 August 2013. Source: International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), media release.

http://irri.org/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=12638:malnutrition-fight-not-over-golden-rice-research-continues&lang=en

The International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) and the Department of Agriculture (DA) – Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice) are continuing to fight malnutrition in the Philippines, and continuing Golden Rice research as a potential way to reduce vitamin A deficiency.

“Golden Rice field trials are part of our work to see if Golden Rice can be a safe and effective way to reduce vitamin A deficiency in the Philippines – to reduce malnutrition,” said Dr Bruce Tolentino, deputy director general of communications and partnerships at IRRI.

“Vitamin A deficiency is “horrible and unnecessary, and we want to do our part to help to reduce it.”

“Our Golden Rice research is part of our humanitarian work to reduce vitamin A deficiency that mostly affects women and children – causing sickness, blindness, and even death,” Tolentino said. “Earlier today one of our Golden Rice field trials located in the Bicol region of the Philippines was vandalized. We are really disappointed that our Golden Rice field trial was vandalized, but it is just one trial and we will continue our Golden Rice research to improve human nutrition.”

In the Philippines, vitamin A deficiency affects approximately 1.7 million children (15.2%) aged 6 months to 5 years. Subclinical vitamin A deficiency affects one out of every ten pregnant women.

Golden Rice is a new type of rice that contains beta carotene, which is converted to vitamin A when eaten. Research so far indicates that eating about one cup a day of Golden Rice could provide half of an adult’s vitamin A needs.

IRRI is working with leading nutrition and agricultural research organisations to develop and evaluate Golden Rice as a potential new way to reduce vitamin A deficiency in the Philippines, Bangladesh and other countries.

In the Philippines, all GM research and development under contained conditions are overseen by the Department of Science and Technology – National Committee on Biosafety of the Philippines. The Department of Agriculture’s Bureau of Plant Industry (DA-BPI) strictly monitors field trials, coordinates evaluation of biosafety information, and approves GM crops if appropriate.

Golden Rice field trials are being conducted in the Philippines by PhilRice and IRRI. The field trials have been permitted by DA-BPI, the national regulatory authority in the Philippines for crop biotechnology research and development, after establishing that the trials will pose no significant risks to human health and environment.

The Golden Rice field site that was vandalized was located within the Department of Agriculture Regional Field Unit 5’s (DA-RFU5) Bicol Experiment Station in Pili, Camarines Sur. The Golden Rice trial site is less than 1,000 square metres (or 0.1 hectare). Nearly all plants have been uprooted and left on site.

“We all want to answer questions about Golden Rice,” Tolentino added. “Therefore, we need to test Golden Rice and test it according to the best and most rigorous research standards. This means continuing field trials to ensure there is adequate data and analysis that will enable informed decisions on Golden Rice.”

“At IRRI, we remain dedicated to improving nutrition for everyone in the Philippines and in other rice-eating countries,” Tolentino said.

“We’re here for the long term, and Golden Rice and other healthier rice are part of our efforts to help reduce malnutrition amongst rice-consumers.


AUS – SALT TOLERANT CROP PARTNERSHIP WITH SAUDI ARABIA

8 August 2013. Source: www.acpfg.com.au/uploads/documents/news/MOU ACPFG KAUST RELEASE FINAL.pdf

ACPFG and KAUST sign MoU to deliver salt tolerant crops

The Australian Centre for Plant Functional Genomics (ACPFG) at the University of Adelaide and King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST) in Saudi Arabia have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), an agreement that will deliver salt-tolerant varieties of wheat and barley for the benefit of both the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Australian growers.

The partnership will allow for transfer of materials, technologies, and resources between the two organizations, facilitating the development of crops that are able to grow in saline conditions. The project will also provide opportunities for student exchanges and joint PhD projects.

“Both KAUST and ACPFG have great resources and mutual interest in understanding and improving salinity tolerance in crops,” said Prof. Mark Tester, Professor of Bioscience at KAUST. “This international agreement provides a valuable opportunity to benefit agriculture in both the Kingdom and Australia – we all win.”

“The agreement is an exciting venture for ACPFG and Australia because our researchers will access additional information, resources, and expertise to investigate how these important crops respond to extreme saline conditions,” said Dr. Stuart Roy, Program Leader at the ACPFG. “The project will help deliver to Australian farmers’ crops that can grow in these tough conditions.”

In one part of this collaboration, ACPFG and KAUST will replicate laboratory and field trials to identify genes that play an important role in salinity tolerance, providing both organizations with extensive data on these cereals.


PHILIPPINES – GM RICE CLOSER

GM rice approval ‘edging closer’

6 August 2013. Source:

www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-23581877

Scientists in the Philippines are weeks from submitting a genetically modified variety of rice to the authorities for biosafety evaluations.

They claim it could be in the fields within a year, but national regulators will have the final say.

Supporters say it will help the 1.7 million Filipino children who suffer vitamin A deficiency – which reduces immunity and can cause blindness.

But campaigners say “Golden Rice” is a dangerous way to tackle malnutrition.

They say that it threatens the Philippines’ staple food.

The fields at the Philippine Rice Research Institute (PhilRice), in Nueva Ecija, just north of Manila, look just like the other thousands of rice paddies that make up the Luzon landscape.

Apart from the tall fences surrounding them, you would never guess they were being used to grow rice that had been genetically modified to produce beta-carotene.

The body converts beta-carotene into Vitamin A and scientists estimate that one cup of Golden Rice could provide up to 50% of an adult’s recommended daily intake.

The rice has been engineered so that the precursor chemical is expressed in the edible grain as well as in the non-edible leaves, where it occurs naturally.

It has taken scientists more than two decades to boost the beta-carotene in Golden Rice to meaningful levels. But Dr Antonio Alfonso, who leads the project at PhilRice, says the product is now ready.

Speaking to the World Tonight programme, he said: “My increased confidence comes from the fact that… our data, aside from being mostly available now, are as expected and, therefore, unlikely to raise new questions or concerns on the part of the regulators.

“But we have to recognise people’s fear. That’s exactly why we have regulation for establishing safety: food safety feed safety, environmental safety, safety to humans, safety to animals, these are all considered in our current regulatory system in the Philippines.”


AUS - REGULATOR RESPONDS TO GM FEED STUDY

Response to a feeding study in pigs by Carman et al

4 July 2013. Source: www.foodstandards.gov.au/consumer/gmfood/Pages/Response-to-Dr-Carman’s-study.aspx

In June 2013, Dr Judy Carman and co-authors published a paper in the Journal of Organic Systems on a feeding study in pigs. The pigs were fed either a mixture of GM corn and GM soy or an equivalent non-GM diet for nearly 23 weeks. The GM diet was derived from plant lines approved for food use in Australia and New Zealand (and in other countries).

There were no differences between pigs fed the GM and non-GM diets for feed intake, weight gain, mortality and blood biochemistry parameters but the authors attributed severe stomach inflammation and enlarged uteri to the GM diet.

FSANZ response – key points 

  • The authors have not provided convincing evidence that stomach inflammation was present. The stomach data, as presented, do not support the authors’ interpretation and conclusions because:

The presence of “inflammation” was determined by visual appearance (reddening) only, without any microscopic (histological) confirmation. This is not considered a reliable method for establishing the presence of true inflammation, because it relies solely on the colour of the tissue which can vary for many reasons.

If the GM diet caused the stomach inflammation, the total number of GM-fed pigs with stomach inflammation would be expected to be greater than non-GM fed pigs. According to the data provided however, greater numbers of non-GM fed pigs exhibited “inflammation”.

The authors erred in their statistical approach to analysing the stomach “inflammation” data. If the data are analysed using more appropriate statistical methods, no statistical association with diet exists.

  •  The authors have not proved that the statistically significant increase in uterine weight is attributable to the GM diet.

The relevance of uterine weight data and the presence of fluid in uteri cannot be determined without information on the ovarian activity of the affected pigs, and without microscopic (histological) evidence to determine the condition of the endometrium. Uterine weight and fluid content can vary enormously in young female pigs based on the stage of puberty and/or their reproductive cycle.

  • There are many deficiencies with the design, conduct and reporting of the study. More detailed comment on these deficiencies is available. These deficiencies are sufficient to invalidate the study conclusions.
  • Overall, the data presented in the paper are not convincing of adverse effects due to the GM diet and provide no grounds for revising FSANZ’s conclusions about the safety of previously approved glyphosate-tolerant and insect-protected GM corn lines and glyphosate-tolerant GM soy lines.

AUS – GM CANOLA SEED SALES SURGE

Roundup Ready Canola Sales Surge 22 per cent

24 June 2013. Monsanto Media Release. Source: www.monsanto.com.au

 

Growers have purchased a record 550 tonnes of Roundup Ready canola seed this season.

New high performing varieties, the reopening of China’s market and negligible premiums for non-GM canola drove the 22% increase in sales from last year.

The strong sales growth follows National Variety Trials (NVT) that reveal Roundup Ready canola varieties have higher oil content and are higher yielding than other herbicide tolerant varieties.

Monsanto Australia Managing Director, Daniel Kruithoff, said that grower confidence in Roundup Ready canola is increasing every season.

“The 22% growth in sales demonstrates the confidence that growers have in the performance of Roundup Ready canola. This is a particularly impressive result given the forecast drop in overall canola plantings this season.

“Roundup Ready canola growers can also look forward to prices that are within $10 of those for non-GM canola. The benefits of Roundup Ready canola significantly outweigh the small price difference which is why growers are buying more of it each and every year.

“Roundup Ready canola sales have increased every year since it was commercialised in 2009 which clearly demonstrates the value growers place on having the freedom to choose GM crops,” Daniel said.

NVT data shows that compared with other top varieties, Roundup Ready canola is on average yielding 12 per cent higher than Triazine Tolerant canola and 6 per cent higher than Clearfield over the last three years.

The trials also reveal that Roundup Ready canola has higher oil content on average than TT varieties helping growers generate more income from the crop.

“The NVT data suggests that growers can also expect more than just reliable weed control from Roundup Ready canola. New high performing varieties offer growers improved yields and oil content,” Daniel said.

For further information about Roundup Ready canola visit www.roundupreadycanola.com.au


AUS – WA EXPERT RECOMMENDS GM

GM considered to remedy field pea disease

20 June 2013. Source: www.sciencewa.net.au/topics/agriculture/item/2215-gm-considered-to-remedy-field-pea-disease.html

A SCIENTIST with 20 years experience breeding field peas (Pisum sativum L.) recommends genetic modification research to mitigate the effects of black spot (Didymella pinodes).

“We have made significant progress in developing moderately resistant varieties of peas but more robust resistance has been illusive,” Professor Tanveer Khan says.

Prof Khan, who is now a research professor at The UWA Institute of Agriculture, has just led a review of international methods trialled to combat the disease, which he says have only been partially successful for growers in Australia.

He says black spot is endemic to most areas of the country planted with field peas.

The fungus survives on pea stubble, releasing spores into the air with the first winter rains.

Prof Khan says yields are relatively low in Australia, so it is not economical to apply fungicides to growing crops although there has been some success with applying fungicides to the seeds themselves.

He says a more successful method in Australia has been to delay sowing for two to three weeks after the first winter rains, after which time most of the spores have been released and fallen on to the soil rather than the growing plants.

The disadvantage of this method is a reduction in crop yield of up to 25 per cent, due to the limited growing season.

Prof Khan says climate change may bring more summer rains which would tend to exhaust most of the spore before pea planting season, however the amount of winter rain and consequent effect on pea yields is unknown.

He says breeding for resistance has had limited results, producing partially-resistant varieties of pea which he recommends be trialled for earlier plantings and/or single fungicide spraying.

Research is in progress to develop molecular marker technology to help development of resistant varieties but he says there have been no major breakthroughs so far.

“A remote possibility is, can you actually have a big breakthrough with genetic modification?” Prof Khan says.

“Can you actually import some resistance from some other alien species into peas?

“I think there’s a good reason why we should invest in some very novel technology.

“In Western Australia there are about 70,000ha grown.

“If we are able to control black spot in future we’re going to see peas becoming a very big crop.

“Potentially peas are the best plant, they are very adaptable, you can grow peas in all sorts of soil and climate.”

Professor Khan is a Research Professor at the UWA Institute of Agriculture, Faculty of Science, The University of Western Australia. In the past, he was an operational plant breeder concentrating on grain legumes for two decades with the WA Department of Agriculture and Food.

He initiated and produced the review in conjunction with scientists based in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and Spain.