From: Jim Diamond <[log in to unmask]> Date: Wed, 4 Apr 2001 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: good article on GE'd trees There is a very full "briefing" titled "The Biological Politics of Genetically Modified Trees" available at http://www.wrm.org.uy/subjects/trees.html -written by Viola Sampson and Larry Lohman. It's one of a series of "Cornerhouse Briefings." It's much too extensive to reproduce here, but covers the many issues involved very well. I'll excerpt a couple of paragraphs below, but there's much more good stuff to be found in the article (especially after you get past a pretty slow-moving introduction): The need to prevent GM trees and their genes from invading native ecosystems is clear. Low-lignin trees have the potential to disrupt the forest composting cycle responsible for unique soil structures and nutrient cycling systems. An influx of low-lignin trees vulnerable to damage from insects and other herbivores, moreover, could result in pest population explosions. Insect-resistant GM trees have the potential to disrupt insect population dynamics and also are likely to enjoy an invasive advantage over forest tree species. More generally, invasions of GM trees could threaten the diversity of the forest gene pool from which trees are selected for conventional breeding -- a reservoir already reduced by selective logging practices. Because trees are even more genetically compatible with their wild relatives than highly-bred agricultural crops, GM "escapes" are especially worrisome in forestry. Although the need to keep GM and non-GM trees separate meshes neatly with industrial incentives for simplifying land use to a single species or variety of tree, the problem is that isolation is virtually impossible in practice. For one thing, plantations often border wild forest systems, and indeed are often set up on land cleared of old-growth forest. For another, tree pollen can travel vast distances. On the treeless Shetland Islands, pollen was found from forests more than 250 km away across the sea. In Northwest India, windborne pine pollen was found 600 km from the nearest pine trees. Crucial forest pollinators including flies, butterflies, ants, beetles, aphids, bumblebees and honeybees are also notably indifferent to posted boundaries between GM and non-GM domains. Seeds are equally difficult to limit to a single geographical area, some being carried around by fruit-eaters while others are wind-borne or water-borne. In fact, it is seed or vegetative fragments which feature in the best-documented cases of long-distance gene flow, for example the establishment of plants on new continents. Many trees can also spread through the distribution of broken twigs, while others send suckers up from their root systems. A single aspen in Utah, for example, boasts 47,000 trunks springing from its root system, and covers 42 hectares. Trees can also grow from stumps left after felling. In sum, trees may be even more adept at spreading their progeny than crops, and once in the wild, a single GM tree could survive for hundreds (perhaps thousands) of years. COMMENT: Highly recommended reading. Once again, it's available at http://www.wrm.org.uy/subjects/trees.html Jim Diamond - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]