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Genetically modified crops' results raise concern
Carolyn Lochhead
San Francisco Chronicle, April 30 2012
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2012/04/30/MN1O1O5SS0.DTL&type=science&ao=all

Washington -- Biotechnology's promise to feed the world did not anticipate
"Trojan corn," "super weeds" and the disappearance of monarch butterflies.

But in the Midwest and South - blanketed by more than 170 million acres of
genetically engineered corn, soybeans and cotton - an experiment begun in 1996
with approval of the first commercial genetically modified organisms is
producing questionable results.

Those results include vast increases in herbicide use that have created
impervious weeds now infesting millions of acres of cropland, while decimating
other plants, such as milkweeds that sustain the monarch butterflies. Food
manufacturers are worried that a new corn made for ethanol could damage an array
of packaged food on supermarket shelves.

Some farm groups have joined environmentalists in an attempt to slow down
approvals of genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, as a newly engineered
corn, resistant to another potent herbicide, stands on the brink of approval.
Vote on labels

In November, Californians are likely to vote on a ballot initiative to require
labeling of genetically engineered foods, which backers of the measure say would
give consumers a voice over the technology that they lack now.

The initiative is part of a nationwide drive to thwart the Obama
administration's expected clearance of a new genetically modified corn that
could flood the nation's cornfields with 2,4-D, a 1940s-era herbicide used
mainly on lawns and golf courses to kill broadleaf weeds.

More than a million people have signed a petition to the Food and Drug
Administration to require labeling of genetically engineered food. That is "more
than twice the number who have ever commented on any food petition in the
history of the FDA," said Gary Hirshberg, chairman of organic yogurt maker
Stonyfield and a leader of the "Just Label It" campaign.

The stakes on labeling such foods are huge. The crops are so widespread that an
estimated 70 percent of U.S. processed foods contain engineered genes. The U.S.
Department of Agriculture has approved more than 80 genetically engineered crops
while denying none.
Mushy corn feared

Organic farmers have long fought the spread of such crops, fearing pollen
contamination of their fields. Environmentalists have warned of long-term health
and environmental effects.

Now, even biotech supporters fear collateral damage. Vegetable growers warn of
plant-killing fogs that they say will accompany the new genetically modified
corn. Snack and cereal makers fear that a new corn engineered for ethanol may
escape its fields and turn their corn chips and breakfast cereals to mush.

Midwest fruit and vegetable growers this month petitioned the Department of
Agriculture to block approval of the 2,4-D-tolerant corn, called Enlist and made
by Dow AgroSciences. Similar crops, including a soybean engineered by Monsanto
to tolerate dicamba, a similar herbicide, wait in the regulatory pipeline.

Current forms of the herbicides are prone to vaporization and can travel miles
from their target, falling back to Earth with rain or fog. Vegetable growers
predict the new corn will unleash rampant use of 2,4-D and dicamba, potentially
damaging every broadleaf plant in their path other than those engineered to
tolerate them.

"Suddenly we are looking at a very dangerous system, because more dangerous
herbicides in America are going to be far more extensively used," said John
Bode, executive director of the Save Our Crops Coalition, a group working to
protect nontargeted plants from herbicides. It has asked the USDA to conduct a
full environmental impact analysis.
Preliminary OK

The USDA's Animal Plant Health Inspection Service, which has chief regulatory
authority over genetically engineered crops, has given a preliminary
recommendation that the new corn be fully commercialized without restriction.

Michael Gregoire, who heads the agency, said any genetically modified crop that
does not meet the definition of a "plant pest," which attacks other plants,
falls outside the agency's authority.

"Once we determine that a genetically engineered plant is not a plant pest based
on a risk assessment, our jurisdiction and our authority to continue to regulate
that ends," Gregoire said.

The Environmental Protection Agency has found that 2,4-D poses "a reasonable
certainty of no harm," but will evaluate the effects of using it with
genetically modified crops later in the growing season after plants have leafed
out and temperatures are higher.

If approved, the new corn could be planted as early as next spring. Charles
Benbrook - a former head of the agriculture board of the National Academy of
Sciences who is chief scientist of the Organic Center, a Colorado group that
researches the environmental benefits of organic farming - projects a 1,435
percent increase in the amount of 2,4-D applied, or 283 million pounds, within
seven years.
Hardier weeds evolve

Corn and soybean farmers are clamoring for the new genetically engineered crops
because those now in use have spawned an infestation of "super weeds" now
covering at least 13 million acres in 26 states. The crops are engineered to
tolerate glyphosate, commonly known by its Monsanto trademark Roundup. They
greatly simplified weed control by allowing farmers to apply the herbicide to
their fields yet leave their corn and soybeans unharmed.

The crops led to a 400-million-pound net increase in herbicide applications
throughout corn, soybean and cotton growing regions, according to Benbrook.

The resulting overexposure to glyphosate encouraged the evolution of hardier
weeds that can tolerate it. Dave Mortensen, a weed ecologist at Pennsylvania
State University, said the number of "super weed" species grew from one in 1996,
when genetically modified crops were introduced, to 22 today.

Scientists warn that the next generation of genetically modified crops will
likewise encourage overuse of 2,4-D and dicamba, creating still hardier weeds
that can tolerate virtually every herbicide on the market.

"It's like pouring gasoline on a fire," Benbrook said.

"We're talking about a lot of pesticide," Mortensen said. "Whether it moves as a
vapor or physical drift or surface water runoff or comes down in rainwater, the
more of something you use, the greater the likelihood you will see it appearing
in places where you did not apply it."

Mortensen worries that 2,4-D and dicamba will damage not just fruit and
vegetable crops, but also wild plants on field edges that harbor pollinators. In
the Midwest, where there is little plant diversity, "those field edges become
critically important reservoirs for hosting beneficial insects," Mortensen said.

Butterflies in decline

Last month, scientists definitively tied heavy use of glyphosate to an 81
percent decline in the monarch butterfly population. It turns out that the
herbicide has obliterated the milkweeds on Midwest corn farms where the monarchs
lay their eggs after migrating from Mexico.

Iowa State University ecologist John Pleasants, one of the study's authors, said
the catastrophic decline in monarchs is a consequence of the genetically
engineered crops that no one foresaw.

Andrew Kimbrell, executive director of the Center for Food Safety, a nonprofit
group that has waged a litigation battle against biotechnology companies, said
the new crops are part of "a chemical arms race, where biotechnology met Charles
Darwin."

Dow AgroSciences spokesman Garry Hamlin said the company has created new
formulas for 2,4-D that reduce vaporization by 92 percent and that farmers using
the new corn will be obligated to use the new formulation. Dow will also train
farmers to make sure they correctly use the new seed and herbicide package,
which Hamlin said is needed.

"Farmers haven't been able to control certain difficult weeds because of
resistance," Hamlin said. "That resistance issue is going to get worse if the
new technology doesn't come into play to intercept it."

Food makers worry

Food manufacturers and grain millers lost a three-year battle at the USDA
against a new genetically modified corn approved last year for ethanol. Hailed
by ethanol backers as "Trojan corn," it turns its own starch to sugar and so
speeds the process of making ethanol to fuel cars. Food manufacturers worry that
even a tiny contamination of food corn by the new crop could turn their corn
chips and cereals soggy.

Made by Swiss-based Syngenta under the trademark Enogen, the corn was approved
over the objections of the biggest names in the U.S. snack and cereals industry.
Syngenta tests show that one kernel in 10,000 can liquefy grits.

Jack Bernens, head of marketing for Syngenta, said products like corn puffs can
have as much as 14 percent contamination before the foods would show any change
in consistency. He said strict contracts with farmers and a sophisticated set of
controls will keep the corn contained. Contamination is unlikely, he said,
because of the wide geographical separation between ethanol and food-corn
regions.

Still, food manufacturers and grain millers remain worried that the corn will
spread through pollen or inadvertent mixing. Genetically modified crops have
escaped at least six times in the past, according to a 2008 General Accounting
Office report, in one case leading to produce recalls and more than $1 billion
in losses to rice farmers. The agency said that "the ease with which genetic
material from crops can be spread makes future releases likely."

For food manufacturers, the ethanol corn that dissolves starches is "a disaster
about to happen," said Lynn Clarkson, president of Clarkson Grain, a grain
dealer in Cerro Gordo, Ill.

"We are face to face with a corn that won't process the way it's processed for
the last 150 years," Clarkson said. "We have a corn that ruins food for starch
uses. If it goes into shipments to Japan, if you were the Japanese, would you
want to be buying from an area that grew this corn, that approved this corn?"

Carolyn Lochhead is the San Francisco Chronicle's Washington correspondent
The Genetic Engineering News is produced by Thomas Wittman and EcoFarm, and supported by a generous donation from the Newman's Own Foundation.  Please pass this vital information on.  If you would like to get on this list go to www.eco-farm.org and select Newsletters.

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