Home
|
Contact Us
|
Partnership
|
Site Map
CheckOrphan
Home
Treatment
Research
People
Events
Team
Advisory Board
Sponsorship
BioEnergy
Home
News
Events
About Us
Sponsorship
GreenBio
Home
News
Events
Organizations
Companies
Research
About Us
Sponsorship
BioBasel
Home
News
Events
About Us
Sponsorship
Checkbiotech - for emerging fields of science
NEWSLETTERS
SUBMIT CONTENT
Checkbiotech Home
Sign In
|
Register
View
Edit
Domain:
GreenBio
Title:
*
Body:
Advances in biotechnology have changed the way American farmers produce food.<br /> <br /> Since 1995, when the first genetically engineered crops became available, American agriculture has been adopting these new tools rapidly. In fact, though not every nation is allowing this new technology to be used by their farmers, global adoption of biotechnology is increasing yearly.<br /> <br /> Genetically engineered (GE) crops are described as those varieties that are developed through gene transfer using molecular DNA technology. Usually, the transfer is between species not related to each other. Thus far, the most popular GE crops are herbicide tolerant and insecticide producing crops. In addition to major crops such as corn, soybeans, and cotton, GE canola, summer squash, and papaya also are grown.<br /> <br /> Grower impacts from planting GE crops include increased yields, easier and safer managing, a change in pesticide use, and potentially reduced input costs. Input costs are affected by both reduced pesticide applications and amounts, but can be partially offset by technology fees attached to some GE varieties.<br /> <br /> Cotton farmers have adopted GE varieties quickly as a strategy against the cotton bollworm, an insect that attacks cotton in most of its production areas. Bt cotton produces its own insecticide, encoded by a gene from Bacillus thuringiensis, a naturally-occurring soilborne bacterium that is found worldwide and controls some insects. As a result, insecticide applications for the bollworm are mostly not necessary in cotton fields planted to Bt cotton.<br /> <br /> In only five years after introduction of this technology, Bt cotton acres increased by 40 percent. In that time, bollworm insecticide use in the United States went from approximately 4.5 million pounds to 400,000 pounds. Further, the average number of cotton insecticide treatments per acre in Alabama was 6.7.<br /> <br /> Today in Alabama, most cotton acres are planted to GE varieties and that insecticide application average now stands at less than one. Further, research after seven seasons of commercial cultivation of Bt cotton has indicated that little resistance to Bt has developed in insect populations.<br /> <br /> Soybean farmers are adopting biotechnology advancements as well, with glyphosate tolerant (herbicide tolerant) varieties leading the way. Glyphosate is considered by many to be an environmentally friendly herbicide. In 1996, 2 percent of U.S. soybean acreage was planted to GE varieties, while only 7 years later, over 80 percent of the acreage was planted to GE varieties. Today, that figure is even higher. With glyphosate tolerant varieties, soybean farmers can control weeds easier while using no-till or reduced-tillage practices, decreasing soil erosion issues.<br /> <br /> In addition, from 1996 to 2001, the use of the soybean herbicide Classic decreased by 53 percent and Pursuit, another popular soybean herbicide, decreased by 58 percent.<br /> <br /> Genetically engineered corn varieties also are now available. Corn farmers are planting Bt corn in an effort to control the European Corn Borer, corn earworm and Corn Rootworm. These insects are the most damaging insect pests of corn throughout the United States with past annual losses exceeding $1 billion.<br /> <br /> In addition, new advances in corn technology are leading agriculture into a new era. Smartstaxtm is a product developed between two separate brands and is a technology that combines 8 traits into a single hybrid. In addition, most major companies are developing GE corn drought events and future corn hybrids will carry their own resistance to diseases.<br /> <br /> Not all crops, however, have been adopted into GE varieties. Genetically engineered potatoes comprised 4 percent of the acreage in 1999 with yearly acreage increases expected. Today, however, the potato GE acreage figure is non-existent.<br /> <br /> A Wall Street Journal article reports that fast food chains were not ordering French fries made from GE potatoes due to perceived customer concerns. As a result, potato farmers continue to grow traditional varieties and do not plant genetically engineered potato varieties. In the end, consumers, or at least a companies’ perception of consumer concerns, dictated the market trend for this particular crop.<br /> <br /> As agricultural biotechnology advances continue, American farmers will have future choices to make regarding adoption of these advances. But it will be consumers that will have the final say in the direction agriculture takes.<br /> <br /> © 2009 The Holyoke Enterprise. All rights reserved.<br /> <br />
Captcha:
Please Enter Code :
*
Time Zone:
*
(UTC -12:00) Eniwetok, Kwajalein
(UTC -11:00) Midway Island, Samoa
(UTC -10:00) Hawaii
(UTC -9:00) Alaska
(UTC -8:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
(UTC -7:00) Mountain Time (US & Canada)
(UTC -6:00) Central Time (US & Canada), Mexico City
(UTC -5:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada), Bogota, Lima
(UTC -4:00) Atlantic Time (Canada), Caracas, La Paz
(UTC -3:30) Newfoundland
(UTC -3:00) Brazil, Buenos Aires, Georgetown
(UTC -2:00) Mid-Atlantic
(UTC -1:00 hour) Azores, Cape Verde Islands
(UTC) Western Europe Time, London, Lisbon, Casablanca
(UTC +1:00 hour) Brussels, Madrid, Paris, Zurich
(UTC +2:00) Kaliningrad, South Africa
(UTC +3:00) Baghdad, Riyadh, Moscow, St. Petersburg
(UTC +3:30) Tehran
(UTC +4:00) Abu Dhabi, Muscat, Baku, Tbilisi
(UTC +4:30) Kabul
(UTC +5:00) Ekaterinburg, Islamabad, Karachi, Tashkent
(UTC +5:30) Bombay, Calcutta, Madras, New Delhi
(UTC +5:45) Kathmandu
(UTC +6:00) Almaty, Dhaka, Colombo
(UTC +7:00) Bangkok, Hanoi, Jakarta
(UTC +8:00) Beijing, Perth, Singapore, Hong Kong
(UTC +9:00) Tokyo, Seoul, Osaka, Sapporo, Yakutsk
(UTC +9:30) Adelaide, Darwin
(UTC +10:00) Eastern Australia, Guam, Vladivostok
(UTC +11:00) Magadan, Solomon Islands, New Caledonia
(UTC +12:00) Auckland, Wellington, Fiji, Kamchatka
Select the time zone
Vocabularies
Newsletter:
- None selected -
checkorphan.com newsletter
Domain:
GreenBio
Show summary in full view
Input format
Filtered HTML
Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
Full HTML
Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
news_filter
Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
More information about formatting options
Related Articles
BASF to Stop Selling Genetically Modified Products in Europe
Cotton stainer, future threat to Pakistan
Improving Crops from the Roots Up
USDA/ERS report: Adoption of genetically engineered crops in...
Bt corn farms expanding
More GMO crop propagation seen
Adoption of Biotech Crops by U.S. Farmers Continues to Rise
BIO Announces Fritz Bittenbender as the New Vice President, ...
Need to conduct biotechnological agriculture research stress...
Scientists Refute Claim That Genetically Modified Corn Cause...
Top GreenBio Articles
Home
|
Partnership
|
Contact Us
|
Site Map
|
News Site Map
© 2000-2012 Checkbiotech.org |
Disclaimer