Society's Child
Western corn rootworms have been able to harmlessly consume the genetically modified maize, a research paper published in the latest issue of the journal GM Crops & Food reveals. A 2010 sample of the rootworm population had an elevenfold survival rate on the genetically modified corn compared to a control population. That's eight times more than the year before, when the resistant population was first identified.
Experts are also noting that this year's resistant rootworm populations are maturing earlier than expected. In fact, the time the bug's larvae hatched was the earliest in decades.
"The Western corn rootworm 'season' is underway at a pace earlier than I have experienced since I began studying this versatile insect as a graduate student in the late 1970s," entomologist Mike Gray wrote in The Bulletin, a periodical issued by the University of Chicago's Department of Crop Studies.
Studies in other states have also revealed that the rootworm population is becoming increasingly resistant to genetically modified corn. Last year, Iowa State University researcher Aaron Gassmann noted that a number of farmers reported discovering, much to their dismay, that a large number of rootworms survived after the consumption of their GM crops. Gassmann branded these pests "superbugs."
Farmers and food companies have increasingly been dependent on GM crops, and many have abandoned crop rotation, a practice that has been used to stave off pest infestations for centuries. Some have even gone as far as to ignore federal regulation, which require the GM corn plantations be accompanied by a small "refuge" of non-GM maize.
The recent findings have potentially devastating ramifications for both farmers and consumers. Genetic maize plantation would easily come under attack from the swelling number of "superbugs," resulting in dwindling harvest numbers for farmers. Ultimately, consumers will pay the price not only for corn, an essential product whose derivatives are used in a plethora of products ranging from yogurts to baby powder, but for other crops sold in the market. Rising corn prices would mean that more farmers would plant corn, despite the risks, and the yield for other crops would drop. That would drive prices for virtually all food items up, hitting hard on a population already smitten by ongoing economic difficulties.
Monsanto launched its anti-rootworm GM corm in 2003. The Cry3Bb1 protein, derived from the Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt.) bacterium, was inserted into the corn's genetic code. The embedded protein was supposed to be fatal to all rootworms.
The recent findings came days after Monsanto, along with other biotech companies, got a major boost from a congressional panel, which okayed the manufacture of GM crops despite pending legal challenges. Many of the lawsuits that Monsanto faces include assessments that its crops are unsafe for human consumption and affect the health of unborn children.
Monsanto has also been an active plaintiff itself. Its primary targets include entities that seek to label GM foods, and small farmers, whom the biotech behemoth accuses of using genetically modified crops patented by Monsanto.
Reader Comments
...life on Earth has been adapting to countless conditions. But Monsanto has this all figured out. Just engineer insect resistant corn. Problem solved, Nature conquered. And of course big bucks for Monsanto.
Or maybe not.
Score: Nature 1, Monsanto 0.
Q: Where do baby rootworms come from?
A: The stalk brings them.
I doubt that I'm the only one here who remembers the predictions in the late 20th century that, thanks to vaccines and antibiotics, infectious disease would be completely wiped out by the year 2000.
Instead, we got superbugs, gonorrhea that can't be cured...
Likewise, Monsanto told farmers that, if they planted genetically-modified corn, they could forget about crop rotation. They could grow corn, season after season, and they would make so much more money.
The result was a different kind of superbugs.
The scientific priesthood promises heaven and delivers hell, and people keep falling for it.
Q: Where do baby rootworms come from?
A: The stalk brings them.
"The stalk . . . " ? ?
Is that a typo. It seems like it ought to be the stork ? ?
I had some ears of corn that I put out at my multiple bird feeders which squirrels often are seen feeding. Days later the corn was still there Many days later the only things that ate the corn was insects.
Thanks Monsanto! You should be so proud.
What a legacy.
The innate sensitivity of 2nd Density trumps what DNA-compromised STS humans manage in 3rd.
In other words: why doesn't MonSatan's crap languish on the store shelves ? ?
Oh WAIT . . . I know . . . because it's not labelled ! ! Imagine that . . .
The bugs always win.