-Caveat Lector-

Quist said, for example, that plants are now being developed to produce
compounds that act as spermicides.

"Just think if that gets out into the environment and has a negative impact on
people's fertility," he said. "It's obvious there are reasons to be concerned -
until we have greater information on what the impact will be - about the
release of this technology."

DNA from genetically modified corn found in Mexican maize

By ALEX DOMINGUEZ, Associated Press

(November 29, 2001 1:01 a.m. EST) - DNA from genetically modified corn
has been found in native corn varieties growing in remote southern Mexico,
heightening fears about the dangers of bioengineered crops.

Scientists fear the accidental spread of laboratory-inserted genes could give
some plants an advantage that would allow them to crowd out other varieties,
reducing the world's biological diversity.

"The benefits of these crops don't outweigh the enormous risks to food
security," said David Quist of the University of California at Berkeley, one of
the researchers who reported the findings in Thursday's issue of the journal
Nature.

Diversity is prized by scientists as a hedge against diseases, pests and
climate change. While some plant strains may be vulnerable to one disease,
for example, others may have natural immunity that enables them to survive.

"We can't afford to lose that resource," said Ignacio Chapela, a co-author of
the study.

Four of six samples of native criollo corn taken last year from fields in
Mexico's mountainous Oaxaca region were found to contain a genetic
"switch" commonly used in genetically engineered plants, the researchers
reported.

In addition, two of the samples were found to have another DNA segment
commonly inserted by genetic engineers. And one sample contained a
commonly inserted gene that prompts the plant to produce a poison effective
against the European corn borer, a pest that can harm crops.

The researchers said the discovery was surprising because Mexico imposed
a moratorium on genetically engineered corn in 1998. Before that, the closest
government-approved plantings of such corn were at least 60 miles from the
sample sites.

Scientists could not determine exactly where the foreign DNA came from. But
Quist said the researchers suspect imported genetically modified corn was
handed out by a government agency as food and may have been planted by
recipients near their traditional crops.

They do not believe cross-pollination happened over long distances because
corn pollen is heavy, does not travel far and is short-lived.

The unintended DNA mixing is not the first involving a genetically engineered
plant.

Still, it highlights the need to carefully control an emerging field in which plants
are being equipped with new genes to let them produce medicines and other
compounds, the researchers said.

Quist said, for example, that plants are now being developed to produce
compounds that act as spermicides.

"Just think if that gets out into the environment and has a negative impact on
people's fertility," he said. "It's obvious there are reasons to be concerned -
until we have greater information on what the impact will be - about the
release of this technology."

Rebecca Goldburg of the Environmental Defense Fund said the findings
show that decisions on whether to approve genetically modified plants should
not be made lightly.

"I think the primary message of this article is that large-scale production of
genetically engineered crops is going to have an irreversible effect because
it is impossible, or virtually impossible, to contain genetic material once it is
put into crops that are planted on a wide scale," she said.

Dr. Val Giddings of the Biotechnolgy Industry Organization, a trade
association, said the foreign DNA in the criollo corn was not a threat to
biodiversity because it would only help the strains survive. Bioengineered
corn strains also help improve crop yields, lessening the need for acreage
and slowing the conversion of wild areas into farmland.

"Biotechnology is alleviating the threat on biodiversity by lessening the need
for land," Giddings said. "This argument that has been advanced just doesn't
hold water."


"If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so
long as I'm the dictator."
 -GW Bush during a photo-op with Congressional leaders on 12/18/2000.
As broadcast on CNN and available in transcript on their website
http://www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0012/18/nd.01.html

Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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