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Bt Brinjal The scope and adequacy of the GEAC environmental risk assessment

Bt Brinjal: The scope and adequacy of the GEAC ... - Down To Earth

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Environmental Risk Assessment 31from previous section).8) Identify pests <strong>of</strong> wild relatives. Determine whe<strong>the</strong>r BFSB or o<strong>the</strong>r susceptible lepidopteran species feed on wild <strong>and</strong>weedy relatives <strong>of</strong> brinjal (S. melongena, S.melongena var. insanum, S. incanum, <strong>and</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r relevant species). Cohen et al.(2008) provide a sampling design for this type <strong>of</strong> study.9) Fitness advantage <strong>of</strong> <strong>Bt</strong> transgene. If lepidopteran larvae are present at any stage <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> life cycle <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se wild or weedyrelatives <strong>of</strong> brinjal, fur<strong>the</strong>r studies should be carried out to determine whe<strong>the</strong>r a <strong>Bt</strong> transgene could enhance <strong>the</strong> survival orfecundity <strong>of</strong> wild/weedy plants under a variety <strong>of</strong> field conditions, <strong>the</strong>reby providing a fitness advantage. Snow et al. (2003)provide an experimental <strong>and</strong> sampling design for this type <strong>of</strong> study.10) Quantification <strong>of</strong> fitness advantage. If this is <strong>the</strong> case, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Bt</strong> trangene is likely become more common in wild orweedy populations that hybridise with <strong>the</strong> crop. Fur<strong>the</strong>r studies could be carried out to evaluate whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> fitness advantageis large enough to result in more problematic weed populations, whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> expected ubiquity <strong>of</strong> <strong>Bt</strong> toxins in wild or weedypopulations could have unwanted effects on non-target lepidopteran insects, <strong>and</strong> whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> rapid spread <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Bt</strong> transgene(<strong>and</strong> linked crop genes) would negatively affect genetic diversity in wild relatives to a greater extent than ongoing gene flow fromnon-transgenic eggplant.Risks to Biological DiversityConclusion 6. Most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> main kinds <strong>of</strong> possible adverse effects <strong>of</strong> <strong>Bt</strong> brinjal on biological species diversity<strong>and</strong> ecosystems have not been evaluated sufficiently. <strong>The</strong> scientific evidence does not support <strong>the</strong> EC-II conclusion (page 42), <strong>Bt</strong> brinjal event EE-1 “has no adverse impact on non-target organisms includingbeneficial organisms <strong>and</strong> soil micr<strong>of</strong>lora.”<strong>The</strong> main potential adverse effects <strong>of</strong> a <strong>Bt</strong> crop to o<strong>the</strong>r species are:(A) Increased secondary pests, ei<strong>the</strong>r through direct enhancement or through <strong>the</strong> reduction <strong>of</strong> natural enemy controls or o<strong>the</strong>rmeans;(B) Reduction in soil quality or health, adversely affecting crop production in ei<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> short or long term;(C) Reduced value <strong>of</strong> non-crop economic activities (such as honey production or wild food harvesting);(D) Reduced cultural value by affecting a cultural icon or a species <strong>of</strong> cultural significance (e.g., Monarch butterfly in <strong>the</strong> UnitedStates);(E) Increased conservation concern, such as an adverse effect on an endangered species;(F) Reduced <strong>environmental</strong> quality through an effect on an ecosystem service such as pollination;(G) Increased human disease via <strong>environmental</strong> change.For <strong>Bt</strong> brinjal, (G) is unlikely, so a good <strong>risk</strong> <strong>assessment</strong> will focus on (A) through (F), allocating <strong>the</strong> most effort to address <strong>the</strong>most important issues. <strong>The</strong> conclusion follows from <strong>the</strong> following scientific considerations.Finding 13. <strong>The</strong> over-reliance <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>GEAC</strong> <strong>risk</strong> <strong>assessment</strong> on <strong>the</strong> specificity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Cry1Ac protein (EC-II, page 37)is not scientifically justified, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>risk</strong> <strong>assessment</strong> is considerably more uncertain than presently indicated.<strong>The</strong> <strong>GEAC</strong> <strong>risk</strong> <strong>assessment</strong> bases its analysis <strong>of</strong> effects on o<strong>the</strong>r species on an assumption about <strong>the</strong> specificity <strong>of</strong> Cry1Ac,which is stated in EC-II (page 37) <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dossier (volume 1, page 38) (detailed below). <strong>The</strong>re are three critical weaknesses tothis specificity hypo<strong>the</strong>sis that renders it a poor assumption on which to base <strong>the</strong> <strong>assessment</strong>.First, <strong>the</strong> EC-II <strong>assessment</strong> states: “… non-target insects lack receptors for <strong>the</strong> proteins on <strong>the</strong> surface <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir gut cells.”<strong>The</strong> actual evidence that all non-target species lack receptors for Cry1Ac on <strong>the</strong> midgut epi<strong>the</strong>lium is quite poor. Toxicity inarthropods is incompletely known, but present underst<strong>and</strong>ing involves interaction <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Cry toxins with at least two geneproducts produced by <strong>the</strong> organism. Genome sequencing work to date has shown that vertebrate lineages do not have any

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