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Transgenic Crops and Issues in Weed Management Alex R. Martin, Professor Department of Agronomy University of Nebraska Lincoln, Nebraska U.S.A. No-tillage crop production leaves crop residue on the soil surface. The residue protects the soil from raindrops and wind which detach soil particles, a first step in soil erosion. Residue reduces soil surface crusting thereby increasing moisture infiltration. Surface residue slows the velocity of runoff water, increasing the time available for infiltration and reducing the amount of soil carried in runoff water. Crop residue remaining on the soil surface has a positive effect on surface water quality. Because water runoff is reduced in quantity and velocity, off site movement of sediment, pesticide and fertilizer is reduced. This results in less deposition in surface water and therefore benefits surface water quality. Surface residue protects the soil from sun and wind reducing evaporative water loss. Standing residue traps snow in the winter increasing soil moisture. The resulting increased soil moisture is beneficial to crop yield in limited moisture environments. Weed control is a challenge to successful no-till crop production. Weeds established at planting time as well as those that develop later must be controlled. Reliance is placed completely on herbicides to control weeds in no-till crop production. Effective economical weed control has been a continuing challenge in no-till crop production. Crop producers have systematically progressed through a series of weed management strategies in an effort to combat constantly evolving weed populations. Herbicide resistant crops (HRCs) used with the appropriate herbicide(s) are effective tools in a weed management program. Herbicide resistant crops (HRC) allow the “in crop” use of herbicides for selective weed control that would otherwise seriously injure or kill the crop. There are several HRCs available or under development (Table 1). The Roundup and Liberty HRCs were developed utilizing genetic engineering techniques while the bromoxynil, IMI, Poast and STS crop varieties were developed utilizing only conventional plant breeding techniques. Crops developed through genetic engineering may be subject to distribution and marketing limitations in some countries. Table 1. Herbicide resistant crops (HRC) and their date of registration. Crop Alfalfa Canola Corn Cotton Flax Potato Rice Soybean Sunflower Sugar beet Wheat Bromoxynil IMI group Glufosinate 1999* 1992 1999* 1997 1998 Glyphosate 2003 1999* 1998 1997 Sethoxydim SU group Canada 1995/96 Canada 2001 2002 2001 1998# 2002 2003 1996 2000** 2005 2000** 2003 1993 *Registration in certain states and Canada. **Registered, but will not be planted commercially. #Registered, but not sold. Herbicide resistant crops exhibit excellent tolerance to the herbicide involved essentially eliminating crop injury. Thus, application rate, timing, and environmental conditions are not concerns with respect to crop injury although these factors are important with respect to weed control. These characteristics of HRCs are great advantages to producers and resulted in the rapid acceptance of this technology. Over 50% of the soybeans in the United States in 1999 were Roundup Ready. Volunteer herbicide resistant crops are also resistant to the herbicide involved. Specific plans must be developed for controlling volunteer herbicide resistant crop plants. As with any practice, use of HRCs and the corresponding herbicide should be part of an integrated weed management program. Currently there is a major controversy surrounding the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in agriculture. The term GMO although widely accepted is probably not the most descriptive from a scientific perspective. The term GMO is applied to organisms (including crop plants) that have had a gene or genes from some other organism, the gene could come from any living organism, inserted into the crop’s chromosomes through genetic engineering techniques. These “new” genes are called transgenes. “Transgenic” is a more appropriate term for plants that contain transgenes. However, the term GMO has become widely used in referring to plants containing transgenes. The GMO controversy impacts weed management in that some but not all of the HRCs that have become widely used are GMOs. The non-GMO HRCs are not involved in this controversy. From a market perspective it is important to understand which HRCs are classified GMO and which are non-GMO (Table 2). Table 2. HRC Classification. Trait IMI-Clearfield Roundup Ready SR-Poast Protected Liberty Link STS Crop Several Several Corn Several Soybean Description Resistance to Imidazolinone Herbicides Resistance to Roundup (glyphosate) Resistance to Poast (sethoxydim) Resistance to Liberty (glufosinate) Resistance to Sulfonylurea Herbicides GMO No Yes No Yes No There is a great deal of confusion on the GMO issue in the public arena fueled in-part by a lack of understanding. Often positions taken are founded on misunderstanding and confusion of the issues involved. In some cases the issue of market consolidation and integration of crop production and marketing are commingled with biological issues when the GMO issue is examined. The GMO issue has been portrayed as contributing to an undesirable integration in agriculture. It is important to systematically examine the key issues in order to evaluate the merits of various positions. Market limitations of transgenic crops is impacting the adoption and economics of their use. Market place resistance to GMOs is perhaps greatest in Europe and relatively low in several countries including the U.S. and Canada although this could change quickly. The market acceptance issue is composed of two dimensions, registration or approval of the GMO, and consumer acceptance. GMOs are approved on a case by case basis. It is common for one GMO to be approved and another not approved within the same country. Equal in importance to regulatory approval is consumer acceptance regardless of approval status. In fact consumer resistance is becoming a more restrictive force in the market place than registration. Recently in the United States, Gerber Foods, a manufacturer of foods for infants and small children, decided not to use any GMOs in their products. This position was driven by consumer acceptance. Most current GMOs contain “input” traits rather than “output” traits. Input traits are useful to the producer in the production of a crop. Examples of input traits are herbicide resistance and insect resistance. Output trains influence the end use value of a crop. Examples of output traits include high oleic acid corn and low saturate soybean. Output traits may bring nutritional or quality attributes to the consumer of the crop. Impart the market resistance to GMOs is due to the fact that most current GMOs contain input traits rather than output traits. The benefits associated with input traits are realized by the producer. The consumer does not realize a benefit from an input trait GMO to offset any perceived risk associated with its use. Market resistance to GMOs has its basis in three broad areas, food safety concerns, ecological concerns, and moral/philosophical concerns. Food safety concerns associated with GMOs include potential allergenic response; antibiotic resistance, nutritional concerns, and concerns regarding unknown effects. These concerns have their foundation in the belief that the current regulatory/registration process for GMOs is inadequate to protect the public. GMOs are subject to carefully testing before they are approved. However, a segment of the public believes the testing and examination of GMOs must be more rigorous. To date there have been no confirmed occurrences of adverse impact of GMOs on consumers. Ecological concerns regarding the use of GMO crops include gene escape to wild relatives, pest resistance resulting from widespread use, impact on non-target species and gene trespass. It is important to note that any ecological risks associated with transgene escape are related to the traits they impart and not to the transformation techniques. Gene escape to wild relatives could occur if the GMO crop had a sexually compatible weedy relative with which it could readily hybridize (Table 3). The likelihood of hybridization is influenced by several factors including the degree of cross-pollination, pollen mobility and pollen viability of the species involved. In the case of an escaped transgene for herbicide resistance, a fitness advantage would occur only in an agricultural setting subjected to treatment with the herbicide involved. The “escaped gene” imparting herbicide resistance would have no impact on the fitness in a natural environment not treated with the herbicide. Table 3. Examples of cultivated crops and sexually compatible weedy relatives. Crop Sexually compatible weedy relative Canola (Brassica napus, B. rapa, B. juncea) Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) Wheat (Triticum aestivum) Rice (Oryza sativa) Sunflower (Helianthus annus) B. napus, B. rapa, B. nigra S. sudanense, S. bicolor, S. almune, S. halepense Aegilops cylindrica, Agropyron spp. Oryza sativa Helianthus annus The consequence of a herbicide resistant transgene escaping to a weedy relative would be realized by the producer and the developer of the transgene and herbicide in the form of a loss in herbicide efficacy. Only the agricultural community would be impacted. The concern about the increased risk of pest resistance to herbicides as a result of the use of herbicide resistant crops is a result of the management practice utilized and not to the transgene. Repeatedly using the same herbicide as the primary weed control measure exerts a selection pressure on the weed population for herbicide tolerance or resistance. The transgene imparting herbicide resistance in the crop has no direct involvement in the selection for herbicide resistance in the weed population. It is possible that herbicide resistant crops will tempt producers to use the same herbicide repeatedly. This repeated use of the same herbicide is biologically unsound and will contribute to selection for herbicide resistant weeds whether a transgenic crop is involved or not. The widespread occurrence of acetolactate synthase (ALS) resistant weeds in the United States resulted following the wide use of ALS inhibiting herbicides. Herbicide resistant crop cultivars were not involved. A related issue sometimes confused with the escape of a herbicide resistant gene to weeds is the escape of insect or disease resistance genes from crop plants to weeds. The latter event could result in increased fitness of the weed in agricultural and native environments. The current controversy in the United States regarding the impact of Bt (Bacillus thuringensis) corn pollen on the larvae of the monarch butterfly is an example of potential adverse affect of a transgenic plant on a non-target species. The toxic protein encoded by the Bt gene expressed in Bt corn maybe toxic to several Lepidoptera species. This is an issue because the European Corn Borer (ECB), the target pest, is closely related to several desirable species. In the case of an HRC, whether a transgene is involved or not, there is not likely to be an adverse affect of the gene on non-target species. Misapplication of herbicides could damage non-target organisms, however this is not specific to GMOs. Gene trespass refers to the unintended movement of transgenes from a crop in one field to an adjacent field, often via pollen movement. This results in the transgene being present in the seed harvested from the “trespassed” field. This will be an issue of concern as long as there is a market classification for non-GMO commodities. The intensity of this problem will depend on the tolerance level set for GMO contamination of non-GMOs. Gene trespass is an issue primarily with cross-pollinated crops. Moral/philosophical concerns regarding transgenic crops have been expressed for a variety of reasons including the premise that this represents an unnatural process. It should be noted that cultivated wheat is a result of an interspecies cross that occurred in nature. A soil bacteria exists that can transfer some of its genes to plant chromosomes. It is true that genetic engineering techniques make it possible to transfer genetic material between organisms quite different from each other i.e. bacteria and plants. An individual’s values will determine whether they object to transfers of genetic material between very dissimilar organisms.