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Printed in the Honolulu Advertiser
Local
News , Monday, April 30, 2007
Genetically Modified Crops Rooted In Funding
By Sean Hao
The University of Hawai'i is conducting genetically modified
crop research on bananas, tomatoes, petunias and lettuce
in an effort to develop hardier, disease-resistant plants.
Researchers at UH's College of Tropical Agriculture and
Human Resources also are trying to develop sugar cane that's
genetically modified to produce a vaccine to protect against
rotavirus — a viral infection that can cause severe
diarrhea and vomiting in young children.
The projects have been going on for several years, but have
not been widely publicized. Other ongoing transgenic crop
research at UH is being conducted on pineapple, orchids,
anthuriums, taro, papaya and limes.
Genetically modified, or transgenic, crops are plants that
have been altered by the transfer of genetic material from
another species.
UH's drive to develop new transgenic crops is driven by
economics, said Stephen Ferreira, an assistant specialist
for plant and environmental protection sciences at UH.
"There's no question at a federal level ... more funds
are being funneled or being targeted to some of these kinds
of areas," Ferreira said. "Ten years ago you could
hardly find money to do transgenic work." But because
the technology is successful and has impact, funds are now
available for transgenic research.
UH research into genetically modified papaya resulted in
the development of a ringspot-virus resistant papaya, which
has helped manage the impact of the virus.
However, UH's work on papaya and taro has caused a backlash
among environmentalists and others. Cultural concerns about
UH's work on genetically modified Hawaiian taro varieties
ultimately forced the university to abandon that effort.
Despite the availability of research money, some scientists
are reluctant to go into GMO work because of backlash of
environmental and cultural concerns, said C.Y. Hu, associate
dean and associate director for research at the UH CTAHR.
However, Hu could not provide details such as the number
of researchers working on genetically modified crop research
or the amount of money spent.
"It's actually going down because we have a lot of
faculty saying there's no point in doing this," he said.
That could ultimately hurt Hawai'i farmers, should new diseases
surface locally, Hu said.
"If you don't want us to do that, we can accept that,"
he said. "But if we don't work on this and a disease
comes in, it's going to wipe you out."
Apart from papaya, UH's remaining genetic crop research
is being conducted in greenhouses or laboratories rather
than in open fields, which lowers the risk of environmental
exposure.
Opponents of genetic crop research and genetically modified
food contend that not enough is known about the long-term
impact of such products. They point out that many countries,
including Japan, won't import transgenic papaya and that
transgenic crops could cross-pollinate with nontransgenic
plants and taint Hawai'i's image as a clean and natural environment.
So far UH's efforts have met with mixed success. For example,
Hawai'i papaya growers now can grow transgenic papayas despite
the presence of the damaging ringspot virus. However, genetically
engineered papayas have yet to generate the market acceptance
and higher sales prices that nongenetically modified papaya
command in some markets. And a UH effort launched in 1995
to design a pineapple resistant to nematodes and mealybugs
has yet to yield a marketable fruit.
Other ongoing research projects include transgenic virus-resistant
lettuce, tomatoes and petunias and fungal resistant Chinese
taro. The university also partners with Hawaii Agriculture
Research Center on an effort to develop transgenic sugar
cane that's resistant to the yellow leaf virus.
Now it wants to develop a better banana — one that's
engineered to resist infection from the bunchy top virus.
Plants infected by the banana bunchy top virus suffer severely
stunted growth and produce deformed fruit, or in advanced
stages produce no fruit. The disease has been present in
Hawai'i since the 1990s.
The project suffered a setback when UH researchers were
unable to license genetically altered banana trees from researchers
in Australia. As a result, UH researchers now have to develop
their own virus-resistant banana, which "is years away,"
said Hu. "There's been some success, but it takes time."
Meanwhile, critics contend the $1.5 million spent so far
on transgenic banana research could be better spent developing
nongenetic techniques for managing the bunchy top virus.
"I think it's a big waste of money," said Sarah
Sullivan, director for Hawaii Seed, an advocate for sustainable
agriculture and a Hawai'i that's free of genetically modified
organisms. "It's a good example of how unsuccessful
GMO research has been."
Others complain that the university is focusing too much
effort on genetic crop research rather than supporting alternative
means of addressing pesky bugs. Hector Valenzuela, a UH vegetable
extension specialist, said the state could have eliminated
the ringspot virus by razing all papaya trees for a year
or two.
"It would have been very difficult for farmers but
it's a sacrifice for the next 50 years" of papaya growth,
he said. "My position is there are many other approaches
(that) could have been looked at."
Instead of razing trees, papaya growers opted to plant GMO
papayas, which have not been a panacea.
"It's difficult because farmers are in a survival mode,"
Valenzuela said. "Of course they're going to take"
a transgenic solution for ringspot.
Transgenic papaya proponents, which include some UH researchers
and farmers, contend that there is no way to control the
ringspot or bunchy top viruses without genetic engineering
technology.
Cutting down all papaya trees "was the first recommendation
that was made, but the decision made by growers was the economic
hit was too costly to bear," said Ferreira, the UH assistant
specialist. "These sustainable or alternative approaches
have not been ignored. They've been studied. There's nothing
new they have to offer."
Reach Sean Hao at shao@honoluluadvertiser.com
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