|
Capital Grains
|
![]() |
![]() ![]() |
![]() |
|
|
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() ![]() |
![]() |
|
|
||
![]() |
![]() |
Re: Monsanto GMO -root wormsHi urhmi ... thanks for posting.
This could be game-changing stuff down the road. The link, below, says more data for Illinois will come out in August. Surely, this is not the only study being done. Stay tuned for now ...
Pat
*******************************
Many Cornbelt farmers planted corn a month earlier than usual this year, and the corn rootworms were on the same schedule. The adults are emerging a good month earlier than usual; and there is a lot of anxiety among the farming and entomological communities about what—if any—Bt hybrids are able to resist the onslaught. And paired with the field analysis comes recommendations from rootworm experts that some hybrids should have a—are you sitting down—50% refuge.
Current Field Research
Corn rootworm experts are picking up where they left off last year, with the discovery that some of them have developed resistance to the Bt toxins that once were fatal to them. Specialist Mike Gray at the University of Illinois said his colleagues were working with counterparts at Iowa State who identified the resistance last year in Bt hybrids that carried the Cry3Bb1 protein. In his weekly newsletter, Gray said, “Thus far, we have not confirmed resistance to this protein in Illinois. We are cooperating with Dr. Gassmann’s laboratory to determine if the Illinois fields in 2011 were infested with a resistant population. Results should be forthcoming in August of this year.” More Refuge Acres
Gray points to the importance of “integrating management practices such as rotating corn with other crops, rotating Bt traits from season to season, considering the use of a non-Bt hybrid along with a soil insecticide at planting, and not neglecting the use of a refuge if a Bt hybrid is planted.” On the issue of a refuge, Gray pushes some recommendations of other corn rootworm experts to the forefront. In another publication, he quotes the authorities as saying the current refuge requirements are insufficient because the corn does not meet a high-dose standard and rootworms have rapidly developed resistance in the laboratory, greenhouse and field. Accordingly, we recommend increasing the minimum refuge for Bt corn targeting corn rootworms to 50% for plants producing one toxin active against these pests and to 20% for plants producing two toxins active against these pests. Increasing the minimum refuge percentage can help to delay pest resistance, encourage integrated pest management, and promote more sustainable crop production.” Will the EPA step into the picture and either remove the hybrids with the Cry3Bbi protein from the market or push your acreage requirements up to 50%? Gray says the EPA response is “murky.” He said a scientific advisory panel had initially suggested a 50% refuge, but the EPA instead initiated a 20% requirement. Gray says a new technology to fight corn rootworms is at least as far away as the year 2020.
Summary:
While corn fields are being found with the Cry3Bbi protein that seemed to have lost its toxicity to rootworms in Iowa last year, entomologists are not ready to proclaim its worthlessness in Illinois. However, many fields that bear that gene as the only measure of protection have been found with pruned corn roots and many adults on growing corn stalks. Along with the research on potential loss of resistance come suggestions that refuges be enlarged to 50%, of a producer is planting corn that has only a single protein designed to fight corn rootworm. *******************************
Dated Dec 2005 ... Cry3Bb1 protein, specifically, appears to be registered to Monsanto.
http://www.epa.gov/oppbppd1/biopesticides/ingredients/factsheets/factsheet_006430-006502.htm
|
|||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
return to message board, top of board |



















