terrorism in the debate over tree genetic improvement toby bradshaw college of forest resources...
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Terrorism in the debate over tree genetic improvement
Toby Bradshaw
College of Forest Resources
University of Washington
toby@u.washington.edu
From the ELF communiquè"Bradshaw, the driving force in
G.E. tree research, continues to unleash mutant genes into the environment that is [sic] certain to cause irreversible harm to forest ecosystems. As long as universities continue to pursue this reckless 'science', they run the risk of suffering severe losses. Our message remains clear, we are determined to stop genetic engineering."
From the ELF FAQ
“The ELF targets have included such issues as deforestation (for human development of roadways, for luxurious living and/or recreation areas, for profit by selling or using trees, etc.), urban sprawl, genetic engineering, natural habitat and ecosystem destruction, the use of slave labor by corporations and more.”
Setting Fires With Electrical
Timers - An Earth
Liberation Front Guide
Human demand for wood and fiber is increasing
Population growth• Lumber• Paper• Fuel• More agricultural land needed to grow food for
humans; less land for forests and wilderness
Biobased economy• Biological raw materials augment and eventually
replace petroleum to achieve sustainability
The upside potential for yield
A 1% increase in conversion of solar
energy to fixed carbon will double
biomass yield
non-PAR56%
non-growing season
22%reflectance,
respiration, etc.21%
net photosynthesis1%
The role of genetics in agriculture
Maize yield
010002000300040005000600070008000
1910
1920
1930
1940
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
kg
/ha
Double-cross hybrids
Single-cross hybrids
Genomics and
biotech
Plant breeding involves two distinct phases
Domestication• Radical transformation of wild plant• A few key mutations with huge effects• Initial progress is extremely rapid
Refinement• Subtle alterations in plant structure and function• Controlled by many genes with small effects• Progress is slow but steady
Corn domesticationCorn domestication
• Teosinte
Timeline:
7000 ybp
• Primitive Maize
5000 ybp
• Modern Hybrids
today
Forest tree domestication will follow an agricultural model
• Domestication of crops radically modified them• Profound changes in morphology and physiology• Domesticated plants cannot survive in the wild
The first genetic mutations that lead to domestication are rare and valuable, but are
only apparent under intensive cultivation
Where are we now and where
will we be?
Number of mutations
Effect of mutations ?
refinement
domestication
?
Genetic engineering (GE) will be required for tree domestication
• One cycle of conventional breeding takes a decade; GE takes 6 months
• Outcrossing mating system prevents recovery of recessive mutations; GE can create them easily
• Many vital tree functions are supported with duplicated genes; GE can ‘knock out’ all copies of a gene at once
• Using genetic engineering, domestication could be compressed into a few decades instead of centuries of conventional breeding
What is a GMO?
• Genetically Modified Organism• Asexual gene (DNA) transfer (genetic
engineering/GE)• Unlimited gene pool• Research tool• Pharmaceuticals• Crops (‘Frankenfood’)• Livestock?• Forest trees?• Fish?• Humans?
Gene transfer (transformation)
Typical traits engineered into crops•Herbicide resistance (e.g., ‘Roundup Ready’)•Insect resistance (Bt toxin)•Vitamin A (‘golden rice’)•Fruit firmness (‘Flavr Savr’ tomato)
Potential benefits of GE plants
• Accelerates plant breeding• Increased yield spares wilderness• Tolerance of harsh environments• Improved nutritional quality• Reduced use of chemical pesticides• Vaccine delivery• Novel products (e.g., pharmaceuticals,
industrial raw materials)
Concerns about GE crops and food
• Human health (e.g., allergies)
• Unnatural breaching of species barrier
• Corporate control of agriculture
• Unethical (e.g., ‘playing God’)
• Environmental risk
Potential environmental risks of GE plants
• Non-target effects (e.g., Monarch butterfly)• Insects become resistant to Bt, making it
useless for organic farmers• Increased use of broad-spectrum herbicides• Gene flow to wild relatives (e.g., ‘superweeds’)• Loss of biodiversity (e.g., monoculture)
Traits being genetically engineered in forest trees
• Herbicide resistance (weed control)• Insect resistance (leaf beetle, budworm)• Disease resistance (chestnut blight, Dutch elm
disease, fusiform rust)• Lignin reduction (reduced chemical use, waste, and
energy consumption in pulping)• Reproductive sterility (prevention of transgene flow)
Traits of the future• Growth and yield• Branching• Microfibril angle• Tolerance of cold, drought, salt• Novel photosynthetic pathways• Self-pulping wood• ‘Farm’aceuticals• Industrial chemical feedstocks
Who opposes tree genetic engineering research?
• Earth Liberation Front: “You cannot control what is wild.”
• Greenpeace: moratorium on all field research with transgenic plants
• Forest Stewardship Council: denies certification to entities conducting field research on transgenic trees
Forest Stewardship Council
The use of exotic species shall be carefully controlled and actively monitored to avoid adverse ecological impacts.
No species should be planted on a large scale until local trials and/or experience have shown that they are ecologically well-adapted to the site, are not invasive, and do not have significant negative ecological impacts on other ecosystems.
Issues to discuss
• What are the trade-offs involved in the adoption or rejection of genetically engineered trees?
• Does genetic engineering differ in any meaningful way from conventional plant breeding?
US National Research Council/National Academy of Sciences position on GE and conventional plant breeding
“The same physical and biological laws govern the response of organisms modified by modern molecular and cellular methods and those produced by classical methods.”
US National Research Council/National Academy of Sciences position on GE and conventional plant breeding
The focus should be on
PRODUCT,
not PROCESS
From the ELF FAQ
“Capitalism as a target is not easily identifiable due to it being an ideology rather than a physical object. But forms and symbols of capitalism can be targeted successfully … [t]he list is endless but could include such symbols in the U.S. as Mt. Rushmore, the Statue of Liberty, Disney, Wall Street, etc.”
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