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Be wary of biotech lettuce experiments

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The Salinas Californian recently reported on a talk by Professor Henry Daniell,

who was here to promote cultivation of drug-producing lettuce.

 

The biotechnology industry has long hoped to use plants, including common food

crops, to produce high-profit new drugs. It is worth noting that Daniell is not

only an academic; he is also the founder of Chlorogen, Inc., a company that

hopes to profit from these so-called 'pharm' crops.

 

Salinas farmers should be leery of lettuce pharming. The California lettuce

industry is still reeling from consumer fears of E. coli contamination. Imagine

the uproar from healthy salad eaters when they learn that California lettuce

growers are planting untested, experimental drugs near the lettuce that is

destined for our supermarkets.

 

Scientists say there is no way to keep untested drugs produced in food crops out

of the food supply. Even the editors of the pro-biotechnology science journal

Nature Biotechnology warned:

 

'Don't use food plants for producing drugs,' because of the health risks.

 

Consumers, including our children, who may unknowingly eat pharmed lettuce could

get an uncontrolled dose of an untested, biologically active drug - with unknown

consequences.

 

As reported in The Californian, Daniell claims that farmers growing untested

drugs in lettuce will face no new regulations. This sounds frighteningly similar

to the promises made by the world's leading pharm crop company, ProdiGene, to

Midwestern farmers.

 

Although the company promised farmers would face 'no new growing practices' if

they chose to plant ProdiGene's untested drugs in their corn, this lax attitude

cost some farmers more than they bargained for. Half-a-million bushels of

Nebraska soybeans were ordered to be destroyed when the unapproved ProdiGene

drug-corn contaminated the soy crop.

 

Daniell claims that contamination would not be a concern because his

drug-producing lettuce can't cross with natural lettuce varieties.

 

But, ProdiGene's corn did not cross-pollinate with soybeans: It contaminated

soybeans with volunteer drug-corn from the previous season's seed grown on the

same land. The drug corn went undetected in the soybean field that was harvested

the following season.

 

Cross-pollination is one of many potential routes of contamination. Other

unapproved biotech crops have contaminated safe, natural varieties during every

stage of production. Contamination occurs through seed mix-ups, wind or animal

seed dispersal, not thoroughly cleaned farm equipment and storage bins,

improperly labeled seeds, and numerous other unpredictable ways, often from

human error.

 

Danielle's system for avoiding cross-pollination relies on the hope that genes

inserted into a plant's chloroplast cells will not be a contamination problem,

since they are a part of the plant's DNA that does not mix in pollination. But,

a 2003 study found that genes can move between the chloroplast and nuclei of

plants, and they did so more often than researchers expected. This means that

Danielle's untested drug plants could cross-pollinate with lettuce destined for

our dinner tables.

 

Given all the potential human errors that could lead to contamination, and the

biological reality that it is impossible to fully contain these untested drug

plants, it is clear that lettuce pharming is a dangerous idea for Salinas.

 

If growers in the Salinas Valley are looking for new markets, they should look

to safer, healthier, and organic markets, not an untested, risky pharm crop that

will do more harm to the industry than good.

 

CHARLES MARGULIS is a spokesman for the Center for Food Safety, a national

advocacy organization dedicated to challenging harmful food production

technologies and promoting sustainable alternatives. He is a graduate of UC

Berkeley and of the California Culinary Academy.

 

By CHARLES MARGULIS

The Californian, 7 January 2008

http://www.thecalifornian.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080107/OPINION/801070\

317

 

 

Real knowledge is to know the extent of one's ignorance.

Confucius

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