West Lafayette, Indiana
April 18, 2002
A genetic plant sterilization
technology known as the Terminator gene that is heralded by
scientists as a possible solution to the ecological problem of
gene drift is being scorned by many environmentalists.
It's a conundrum that has some scientists scratching their
heads.
The United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity, which is
being held in The Hague this week (4/15-19), is examining the
issue of whether plant sterility genes should be banned
internationally. So far, India is the only nation to ban the
technology, although the technology is not being used in any
nation.
Purdue University
bioethicist Paul Thompson says much of the opposition to plant
sterilization technology is misplaced fury.
"It's an issue that's not very well understood, and I think
environmental groups haven't thought through the potential
benefit of the gene," Thompson says. "The important thing that
is being overlooked is that incorporating the gene is a good
strategy for limiting the environmental impact of genetically
modified plants."
Thompson holds the Joyce and Edward Brewer Chair in Applied
Ethics in Purdue's Department of Philosophy, and is the author
of "Agricultural Ethics: Research, Teaching, and Public Policy"
and "Food Biotechnology in Ethical Perspective."
William Muir, professor of animal sciences, has done extensive
work on the ecological risk of introducing genetically modified
plants and animals into the environment.
Through his research, Muir and Rick Howard, professor of
biology, have shown that if a genetically modified plant or
animal has a reproductive advantage, such as being larger, it
could become an invasive species or even drive the native
population to extinction.
"Any ecosystem took billions of years to co-adapt to other
species and become established," Muir says. "A major problem
with maintaining such an ecosystem is the introduction of exotic
plants and animals, as we see with the introduction of things
such as zebra mussels and the gypsy moth.
"Genetically modified species are similar in many aspects to
exotic species. Genetically modified organisms should only be
introduced into wild ecosystems after extensive study of the
risk and they are found to be safe. The so-called Terminator
technology would bypass this hazard, and the downside of the
technology is minor in comparison to the potential benefits."
If a plant sterilization gene is inserted in a genetically
modified plant, the plant is unable to produce fertile seeds.
Critics of the technology say this is unfair to poor farmers
because it prevents them from setting aside a portion of the
harvest as seed for the following year and forces them to buy
seed each year.
However, farmers in the United States and other industrialized
nations don't commonly replant seed from the previous year's
crop.
Marshall Martin, associate director of Agricultural Research
Programs at Purdue, says that most U.S. farmers do not save
seed.
"Farmers cannot save seed from hybrid corn because it will not
produce a good yield. Farmers who buy genetically modified
soybeans sign an agreement saying they won't save the seed,"
Martin says. "With crops such as soybean, cotton or wheat,
because private companies and land-grant universities
continuously develop and release new varieties that offer
greater yields and disease resistance, farmers prefer to buy
this improved seed rather than save seed from the previous
year."
Because of poor profit potential in low-income developing
nations, major seed companies don't consider farmers in these
countries to be attractive customers, Martin says.
"When they have developed biotech crops for these nations, such
as Monsanto did with the
disease-resistant sweet potato, they have often given away their
discoveries to public institutions," he says. "In the case of
the sweet potato, Monsanto gave the discovery to the Ministry of
Agriculture in Kenya for further development and distribution.
The companies realize they're not going to make much money off
of farmers who are growing crops mostly for their families. The
transaction costs are fairly high to deliver small amounts of
seeds to farmers in remote areas who have limited capital and
acreage, so they try to get as much humanitarian and public
relations value out of it as they can by giving it away.
"For a seed company there would be limited commercial
opportunity for a crop such as sweet potato compared to crops
such as corn, soybeans, wheat, cotton, canola, etc., that are
grown in many parts of the world by larger commercial farmers."
The large seed companies were interested in plant sterilization
technology, also known as trait protection technology, because
it would allow them to sell genetically modified seed to farmers
without having to enforce a user's agreement. Now, when some
farmers violate the user contracts companies
must take them to court, which is an expense and detracts from
the company's public image.
Drew Kershen, who is the Earl Sneed Centennial Professor of Law
at the University of Oklahoma College of Law, says scientists in
the U.S. Department of Agriculture and in
Delta and Pine Land Company
first developed trait protection genes as an environmental
protection technology in 1993.
When the patent for the gene was issued in 1998, some companies,
particularly Monsanto, were interested in licensing the patented
technology. This interest melted away in face of the
controversy, and no crops containing the plant sterilization
genes were ever put on the market.
"After environmental groups
campaigned vigorously against trait protection systems, the
United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization declared it an
immoral technology," Kershen says. "As a result, scientists who
work with the United Nation's Consultative Group on
International Agricultural
Research adopted a policy prohibiting the use of the technology
in their breeding programs. The FAO decision was a political
decision not based on understanding neither the science nor the
environmental benefits of trait protection systems.
"This occurred despite the fact that the USDA scientists who
created the genes envisioned the technology as a means of
preventing an unwanted spread of transgenic traits into weedy
relatives of crop plants and into other non-transgenic crops.
Delta and Pine Land Company continues to develop
trait protection technology."
Thompson says the Terminator technology has garnered more than
its share of attention.
"Terminator has captured the public's attention unlike any other
form of biotechnology out there," he says. "I have no idea why
that is. My speculation is that making a seed sterile goes
against some basic sense of what's right."
But Thompson says it may be the Terminator label itself that
caught the public eye.
The Terminator name was given to the technology by
anti-biotechnology interest groups. The scientists who developed
the gene originally gave it the name "control of gene
expression." Thompson says the Terminator tussle is just one
example of how language has been used to misconstrue science.
"This happens on both sides of the biotechnology debate," he
says. "On the one hand you have some groups using scare tactics
and using labels such as Terminator or Frankenfoods. On the
other hand you have corporate public relations departments doing
massive consumer attitude research to come up
with names for the products that get people to think about the
products in cuddly and friendly terms.
"Either way you're manipulating the issue rather than addressing
it."
When the U.S. Department of Agriculture examined the issue of
the Terminator gene in 2000, there was disagreement between the
scientists and the environmental groups, says Martin, who was a
member of the USDA Agricultural Biotechnology Advisory Committee
when it examined the issue.
"The majority view of those of us on the USDA committee was that
we should go forward with research on the technology," he says.
"But all of the public comments that we received from the
environmental groups were opposed."
Because the technology would seem to prevent an environmental
problem, some people in agriculture have suggested that the
issue of plant sterilization genes is a stalking horse ‹ that
these groups are opposed to the technology simply because they
oppose any type of genetic modification.
"If an environmental group gets to the point where it is trying
to make the technology as dangerous as possible to stop people
from using it, that strikes me as a cynical approach," Thompson
says. "If we shouldn't be doing any genetic engineering of
plants, we should be making that argument on the
merits. We should not encourage reckless policy decisions that
make biotechnology more dangerous."
Writer:
Steve Tally, (765) 494-9809;
tally@purdue.edu
Sources:
Paul Thompson, (765) 494-4295,
pault@purdue.edu
William Muir, (765) 494-8032;
bmuir@purdue.edu
Marshall Martin, (765) 494-8365;
marshallmartin@purdue.edu
Drew Kershen, (405) 325-4784;
dkershen@ou.edu
Related Web sites:
Thompson's professional Web page:
http://ag.ansc.purdue.edu/capwb/drthompson.htm
Muir's professional Web Page:
http://www.ansc.purdue.edu/faculty/muir.htm
Kershen's professional Web page:
http://www.law.ou.edu/profs/kershen.shtml
Martin's professional Web page:
http://www.agecon.purdue.edu/staff/directory/results/details.asp?username=martin
UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) 'COP6':
http://www.biodiv.org/meetings/cop-06.asp
UN Food and Agriculture Organization:
http://www.fao.org/english/index.html
Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research :
http://www.cgiar.org/
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