www.checkbiotech.org ; www.raupp.info ; www.czu.cz
Some genetically modified fish appear to undergo a personality change when
they leave laboratory conditions for a more natural environment, according
to new research, March 2007 by Bob Holmes.
Transgenic fish that behave ferociously in a bare tank, appear meek under
more natural conditions, meaning it will not be easy for biologists to
predict the ecological consequences of escaped GM animals.
Salmon genetically engineered to overproduce growth hormone can put on up to
25 times the weight of wild salmon and could provide "aqua-culturists" with
a faster way to raise fish to market size.
However, lab tests suggested that transgenic fish are more aggressive
predators than wild salmon, raising concerns that they could harm native
fish if they escape into the wild.
Stream tanks
Fredrik Sundström and colleagues at Canada's Center for Aquaculture and
Environmental Research, Fisheries and Oceans, in Vancouver, tested whether
the GM fish would have the same superiority in more natural conditions.
When they raised the fish in stream tanks complete with gravel, large rocks,
logs and natural food items, they found that the GM fish still grew a little
faster and ate a little more than unmodified fish, but their advantage was
much smaller than when the fish lived in a simple metal tank and ate food in
pellet form.
That does not mean escaped GM fish would not cause ecological damage, says
Sundström, only that biologists will need to work harder to answer the
question. ?You can?t use fish reared in the lab to predict what will happen
in nature,? he says.
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www.newscientist.com]