April 8, 2004
Pew Initiative on Food and
Biotechnology - News summary
As Reported in the News
Associated Press
In an unmarked site on the edges
of this community of berry farmers, Bob Harriman puts one foot
on the world's most controversial grass. It's a blanket of
brilliant green - as thin as a piece of paper and as uniform as
cellophane, reports the Associated Press.
If it sounds unnatural, that's because it is.
The turf is a genetically modified version of the creeping
bentgrass popular on golf course greens and fairways, and it is
being tested here by Scotts Co., which hopes its creation will
be resistant to a common weed-killing chemical.
Scotts keeps the test site incognito because environmentalists
are trying to ban the bioengineered grass - and radical groups
have gone so far as to sabotage test plots elsewhere.
But while environmentalists have long opposed bioengineered
crops of any kind, this silky turf has other powerful voices
urging caution: the Bureau of Land Management and the U.S.
Forest Service.
"Our concern is that if it was to escape onto public land, we
wouldn't know how to control it," says Gina Ramos, senior weed
specialist for the Bureau of Land Management.
Her words conjure an image of a golf course gone berserk - a
state park, for example, blanketed in acres of perfect putting
green turf, with no biodiversity, says AP.
Harriman, Scotts' chief research scientist, counters that
numerous studies by the company indicate the grass is unlikely
to spread. The grass seeds are dispersed by flowering blossoms -
but the closely shorn turf on a golf course is never allowed to
grow tall enough to flower.
The natural version of creeping bentgrass is the perfect surface
for a golf ball because as its name suggests, it "creeps" -
growing in a smooth horizontal plane. But, as Harriman points
out, kneeling to stroke a patch adjoining the bentgrass test
site, the silky smoothness can get interrupted by a coarse weed
- a yellow grass that grows vertically in bunches, like an
artichoke.
On a putting green that acts as a speed bump, deflecting the
ball and frustrating even the most talented golfer.
"Tiger Woods hates this stuff," Harriman says.
The problem is that trying to kill the weed with an herbicide,
such as Monsanto Co.'s Roundup, would also kill the creeping
bentgrass.
The grass tested here is engineered to be resistant to Roundup.
A superintendent who seeds his putting green with this grass
will be able to spray it at will - and only the yellow weed will
shrivel and die, leaving the velveteen bentgrass.
That would be a golf course superintendent's dream. Of the
15,000 courses in the United States, only the most elite can
afford to wipe out the yellow weed, either by fumigating the
entire green, or else handpicking the clumps.
The bioengineered grass is now in the final stages of approval.
The three-month public comment session ended in early March.
Among the opponents were environmental groups such as the Sierra
Club and the Nature Conservancy, which have long spoken out
against bioengineering, reports the Associated Press.
The United States Golf Association has came out in favor of the
biotech grass. After all, 60 different bioengineered crops have
received federal approval - including tomatoes, corn, soybean,
canola, potatoes and papaya trees.
"The irony is, you're cooking your french fries in oil that's
genetically engineered," says Stanley Zontek, a regional manager
with the golf association.
But the Bureau of Land Management and the Forest Service have
urged the U.S. Department of Agriculture to delay approval for
the turf in order to do more research on its potential impact.
"What we're saying is let's be very careful until its proven
that its not going to do the things we're concerned about - like
take over," says Jim Gladen, director of the Forest Service's
watershed, fish, wildlife, air and rare plants division.
At the Bureau of Land Management, Ramos stresses that because
the grass is resistant to Roundup, it's unclear how it could be
kept in check if it were to escape the confines of a golf
course.
"Our budget is already strained trying to control invasive
species - having one more will really be difficult for us," she
says.
Those words of caution from federal agencies have taken some by
surprise.
"I've never seen it happen before," says Peter Jenkins, policy
analyst for the International Center for Technology Assessment,
which advocates for limits on genetic engineering.
Other government voices that have joined the chorus of caution
include the Oregon Department of Agriculture and the California
Department of Fish and Game, as well as experts with the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, the Pennsylvania Bureau of Forestry and
the California Department of Parks and Recreation.
Since the introduction of the first genetically modified tomato
a decade ago, bioengineering has been fraught with controversy.
Four years ago, a group dubbing itself the Anarchist Golfing
Association broke into a seed research facility in Portland,
Ore., and stomped on experimental plots, then spray-painted the
walls with the slogan, "Nature Bites Back." In 2000, biotech
saboteurs struck more than 20 times in the United States,
including burning the landmark Agriculture Hall at the
University of Michigan.
According to the Associated Press, such attacks make biotech
companies nervous, but they are not abandoning their testing.
Oregon farmers hand-picked by Marysville, Ohio-based Scotts are
growing nearly 400 acres of biotech grass in Madras, a
three-hour's drive from Gervais.
"We've been here since the 1970s. It would be un-American to be
scared away," Harriman says. "Why a new use of a safe technology
should cause controversy is beyond me."
As Reported in the News is a weekday feature that summarizes
one of the most interesting stories of the day, as reported by
media from around the world, and selected by Initiative staff
from a scan of the news wires. The Initiative is not a news
organization and does not have reporters on its staff: Posting
of these stories should not be interpreted as an endorsement of
a particular viewpoint, but merely as a summary of news reported
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