Poster's note : I don't use the #Mustread tag lightly, but this technology
has enormous potential implications for biogeochemical cycling on
geological timescales. The rise of C4 plants has given us today's global
climate. It's therefore critically important that geoengineers get involved
in this debate. It's not inconceivable that a mistake here could end up
snowballing us. Whilst unlikely, comprehensive evaluation of such risks is
critical.

http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22429892.900-should-we-upgrade-photosynthesis-and-grow-supercrops.html?full=true#.VDJboCO3PFo

Should we upgrade photosynthesis and grow supercrops?

06 October 2014 by Michael Le Page
Magazine issue 2989.

A long-awaited breakthrough by crop scientists raises some thorny issues
for conservation. What about a radical solution?PLANTS are badly out of
date. They gained their photosynthetic machinery in one fell swoop a
billion years ago, by enslaving bacteria that had the ability to convert
sunlight into chemical energy. Plants went on to conquer the land and green
the earth, but they also became victims of their own early success. Their
enslaved cyanobacteria have had little scope to evolve, meaning plants can
struggle to cope as the atmosphere changes.The free-living relatives of
those bacteria, however, have been able to evolve unfettered. Their
photosynthetic machinery is faster and more efficient, allowing them to
capture more of the sun's energy.Scientists have long dreamed of upgrading
crop plants with the better photosynthetic machinery of free-living
cyanobacteria. Until recently all attempts had failed, but now they've
taken a huge step forward.A joint team from Cornell University in New York
and Rothamsted Research in the UK has successfully replaced a key enzyme in
tobacco plants with a faster version from a cyanobacterium (Nature, vol
513, p 547). Their success promises huge gains in agricultural productivity
– but is likely to become controversial as people wake up to the
implications.The enzyme in question is called RuBisCo, which catalyses the
reaction that "fixes" carbon dioxide from the air to make into sugars. It
is the most important enzyme in the world – almost all living things rely
on it for food. But it is incredibly slow, catalysing only about three
reactions per second. A typical enzyme gets through tens of thousands. It
is also wasteful. RuBisCo evolved at a time when the atmosphere was rich in
CO2 but devoid of oxygen. Now there's lots of oxygen and relatively little
CO2, and RuBisCo has a habit of mistaking oxygen for CO2, which wastes
large amounts of energy.Its inefficiency is the main factor limiting how
much of the sun's energy plants can capture. The version found in most
plants has become better at identifying CO2, but at the cost of making it
even slower. Meanwhile, free cyanobacteria found a way to concentrate
CO2 around RuBisCo, so that they could keep the faster version.Hence the
desire to upgrade crop plants by adding cyanobacterial machinery, which
could boost yields by about 25 per cent (New Scientist, 22 February 2011, p
42). What's more, such plants will need less water, because they don't need
to keep their pores open as much, meaning they can better retain
moisture.That is what the Cornell and Rothamsted collaboration is working
towards. They are not there quite yet: a few more parts of the
cyanobacterial system need to be transferred for their plants to take full
advantage. But the work is a massive step forward.It now seems certain that
supercrops with "turbocharged photosynthesis" will be growing in our fields
in a few decades, if not sooner. This seems like great news in a world
where demand for food, biofuels and plant materials like cotton continues
to increase, and where global warming will have an ever greater impact on
crop production. More productive plants means greater yields.But there is a
danger too. Critics of genetic modification have long argued that GM crops
will spread in the wild, or that their modified genes will "pollute" wild
relatives, with disastrous effects. So far these fears seem exaggerated.
There are monster plants running rampant through many countries, but they
are not GM creations – they are invasive species.This is not surprising:
most GM traits are not useful to wild plants. A trait such as herbicide
resistance is only useful to plants growing in areas where herbicides are
used, such as in fields and road verges.Upgrading photosynthesis is a
different story. If biologists succeed in boosting it by 25 per cent or
more, the upgraded plants are going to have a big advantage over their
unmodified cousins. And that could spell trouble.There is a precedent.
About 30 million years ago some plants evolved a way to concentrate
CO2 like cyanobacteria do. These are called C4 plants, and although they
make up only 4 per cent of plant species, they account for 25 per cent of
plant biomass. Look out over a grassy savannah and just about every living
thing you see will be a C4 plant.If we fill our fields with supercrops and
plant forests of supertrees it seems inevitable that they will turn feral
and, like C4 plants before them, come to dominate some ecosystems – though
it might take millennia. That prospect will horrify many. When anti-GM
campaigners start protesting against the introduction of turbocharged
crops, they will have a point: the wisdom of growing superplants in open
fields is definitely debatable.But the arguments in favour – boosting
agricultural yield to feed more people with less land while also sucking
more CO2 out of the atmosphere – are also powerful. And there's another
side to it. Wild animals need to eat too, and we're not leaving much for
them. An ecosystem based on superplants would support more life overall.If
society decided to go ahead, another choice would almost certainly come up.
We could just stand by and let boosted grains, vegetables and trees run
wild, possibly driving some other plant species to extinction. Or we could
level the playing field by upgrading many wild plants too.This may seem
like a shocking idea. But the reality is that we are way, way past the
point where we can preserve Earth the way it was before we came to the
fore.We are already well into the Anthropocene. The areas we think of as
wild and untouched are nothing like they were before our ancestors arrived.
The apples and bananas we feast on are much-mutated monsters compared with
their wild relatives.If we are going to reshape plants so that they can
make more food, why not do it in a way that benefits most life on Earth,
not just us humans?This article appeared in print under the headline
"Turbocharge our plants"Michael Le Page is a features editor at New
Scientist

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