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Genetically modified plants don?t harm beneficial bugs that kill pests
Posted by: Prof. Dr. M. Raupp (IP Logged)
Date: June 09, 2008 03:12PM

A new research by scientists has found that genetically modified (GM) plants
that use a common soil bacterium to kill pests, won?t harm beneficial bugs
that are the natural enemies of the pests.

Entomologists at the Cornell University in the US conducted the research.

The research showed that GM plants expressing Bt (Bacillus thuringiensis)
insecticidal proteins are not toxic to a parasite that lives inside the
caterpillar of the diamondback moth, a devastating worldwide vegetable pest.

?The conservation of parasites is important for enhancing natural biocontrol
that will help suppress pest populations as well as reduce the potential for
the pest insects to develop resistance to the Bt,? explained Anthony
Shelton, Cornell professor of entomology at the New York State Agricultural
Experiment Station in Geneva, NY, who conducted the study with postdoctoral
associate Mao Chen.

The Bt bacterium, which is not harmful to humans, has been used for decades
as a leaf spray and since 1996, in GM plants, a method that has proven much
more effective and is now more widely used.

Both uses are approved by the US Environmental Protection Agency.

?Few studies have examined the effect of Bt plants on parasites of
caterpillars, but some of them have reported negative impacts,? said Chen,
noting that the new research suggests that those negative findings were
likely due to testing methods.

To separate out the effect of insecticides and Bt proteins on the
caterpillar and parasite, the Cornell researchers isolated and bred strains
of caterpillars that were resistant to Bt or a conventional or organic
insecticide.

Then, the caterpillars were parasitized with a wasp that kills the
caterpillar in nature.

The resistant caterpillars were then either fed GM plants expressing the Bt
protein or non-GM plants sprayed with the Bt protein, conventional
insecticides or organic insecticides.

The parasitized caterpillars that ate plants treated with conventional and
organic insecticides to which they were resistant, survived and developed
into moths because the parasite was killed by the insecticide the
caterpillar ingested.

However, when the caterpillar fed on the Bt-sprayed plants or Bt plants, the
parasite was not affected and killed its host caterpillar when it emerged as
an adult wasp, showing that Bt plants are not toxic to the parasite.

www.checkbiotech.org



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