EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: 31 AUGUST 2000 AT 14:00 ET US 
Contact: Ginger Pinholster
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
202-326-6421
American Association for the Advancement of Science 
Farmers and GM crops should both impact farmland birds, Science study
predicts 
This news release is also available in French. 
The use of genetically modified herbicide-tolerant (GMHT) crops may severely
reduce bird populations on a small percentage of farms, while having little
effect on most others, predicts a new study in the 1 September issue of the
international journal, Science. Overall, the consequences should depend upon
which farmers adopt the new crop types, the study's authors conclude. 
The possible effects of GMHT crops on wildlife in the countryside has been
the subject of ongoing debate, and the British Government has introduced a
moratorium on the use of these crops until the issue is resolved. 
Lead Science author Andrew Watkinson, from the University of East Anglia, in
Norwich, England, and his colleagues have created a model that simulates the
growth of weed populations within crops. Using the model, the team
investigated the consequences of the changed herbicide use likely to be
associated with GMHT crops. The results showed that weed seed populations
can be expected to decline by at least 90% in some cases. 
An important part of the study links the decline in weed numbers to bird
numbers, predicting that such a decline in seed abundance should seriously
reduce the numbers of skylarks using these fields. 
The controversial field trials currently underway in the United Kingdom are
intended to investigate the consequences of GMHT crops for biodiversity. 
"The field trials will be very valuable, but will not tell us what will
happen to bird populations. They are carried out on too small a scale. One
considerable advantage of the methodology we have adopted is that it enables
us to make predictions now rather than having to wait for the results of a
three year trial," Watkinson said. 
Several decades of intensified agriculture in Europe have had a particularly
serious effect on birds, whose populations in the United Kingdom have
declined by up to 90 percent in the last 25 years, according to Watkinson. 
"It seems likely that the widespread introduction of herbicide-tolerant
crops will result in further declines for many farmland birds unless other
mitigating measures are taken," Watkinson said. 
The model developed by Watkinson's team examines the management of
herbicide-resistant sugar beet and its effects on a major annual weed of
that crop (Chenopodium album, more commonly known as Lamb's Quarters in
North America and Fat Hen in Britain) and the seed-eating skylark Alauda
arvensis. 
"These results probably apply widely to other crops, weeds, and seed eating
birds," noted Watkinson. 
The study showed that a key issue in predicting the impacts on bird numbers
was the pattern of farmers' uptake of the new GM technology. Most fields
have very low seed densities. It's the smaller proportion of fields with
high seed densities that is particularly important for bird populations. 
The researchers predict that the severity of the bird declines will depend
upon which farmers are most likely to adopt the GMHT crops. If their use is
restricted to intensive farms with low seed densities then the effect will
be minor. However, if the herbicide-hardy crops are adopted by a wide range
of farmers--especially farmers with very weedy fields--then the bird
declines are likely to be more severe, according to the study. 
In their Science paper, Watkinson and his colleagues emphasize that their
findings don't just apply to the effects of genetic engineering. The same
approach could be used to predict the consequences of other changes in
farming practice, they say. 
A commentary by Les Firbank, of the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, in
Cumbria, England, and Frank Forcella at the USDA Agricultural Research
Station, in Morris, Minnesota, and the University of Minnesota, in St. Paul,
Minnesota, accompanies the Science paper. 
Firbank and Forcella write that the model provides a "welcome conceptual
framework," but that further work will be necessary to resolve some of the
model's simplifications. According to the commentary, some data from the
United States, where GMHT crops are currently growing, suggest that weed
control with GMHT crops may not be as effective as some of the model results
indicate. 
Such differences emphasize the need for field trials to complement
theoretical studies like this one, Firbank and Forcella point out. 
###
The other members of Watkinson's team are Robert Freckleton, and William
Sutherland, of the University of East Anglia, in Norwich, England, and
Robert Robinson, of the British Trust for Ornithology, in Norfolk, England.
Their study was funded by the University of East Anglia and the Natural
Environment Research Council. 


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