NEWS
Genetically Engineered Salmon More Aggressive

Author: Sandi Doughton
Truth About Trade . (Source)

Population effects of growth hormone transgenic coho salmon depend on food availability and genotype by environment interactions.


In a head-to-head battle for food, normal coho salmon lose out to their genetically engineered cousins, says a new study that adds to the controversy over what critics call "frankenfish."

Not only did the aggressive, gene-modified salmon gobble up most of the feed when raised in tanks with ordinary salmon, but they also gobbled up their weaker competitors - including their own type, British Columbia scientists reported in the June 7 online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The results were often dramatic population crashes, with only one or two of the genetically modified fish surviving in tanks that originally held 50 animals, said lead author Robert Devlin of Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

"When food supplies are low, transgenic (genetically modified) fish have a very significant effect on the population," he said, adding the caveat that laboratory experiments may not predict what would happen if bioengineered salmon escaped into the environment.

But thats a question that needs to be answered soon.

Massachusetts-based Aqua Bounty Farms has asked the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for approval to market what could be the first transgenic food fish: Atlantic salmon that grow twice as fast as normal fish. Aqua Bounty hopes to raise its transgenic salmon in coastal net pens in the United States and market the eggs around the world, said Joseph McGonigle, vice president for external affairs. "We are constantly hearing from companies that are interested in it," he said.

Faster-growing salmon would cut costs dramatically for fish farmers and lead to lower prices in the supermarket, McGonigle said.

Consumer groups, commercial fishermen and some scientists say studies such as Devlins show the potential ecological consequences of unleashing man-made breeds of fish.

"We should not be taking a risk like this at a time when native salmon stocks are already in trouble," said Doug Gurian-Sherman, senior scientist at the Center for Food Safety, a consumer group based in Washington, D.C.

A 2002 National Academy of Sciences report expressed moderate concern that genetically engineered fish might pose risks to consumers if, for example, a person who was allergic to scallops ate fish with a scallop gene spliced into its DNA. But experts agreed that the biggest danger is that some of the gene-modified fish would inevitably escape into the environment.

Hundreds of thousands of Atlantic salmon have escaped into Northwest waters from salmon farms over the past several years when floating pens were ripped apart by storms or marauding sea lions.

The worst-case scenario involving transgenic fish is the "Trojan gene" hypothesis proposed by Purdue University geneticist William Muir: Genetically engineered salmon outcompete normal fish for food and mates, leading to less-hardy hybrids and the eventual extinction of the entire wild population.

McGonigle says the net pens would hold only sterile females, eliminating the possibility that escapees could breed in the wild. Several other studies, including some in Devlins lab, have shown that the genetically engineered fish arent likely to survive well outside of captivity because theyre more susceptible to disease and oblivious to predators.

"We realize we have no chance of getting approval unless we can clearly demonstrate these fish are completely sterile, and they represent no genetic threat and no behavioral threat, in terms of competition for resources," he said.

Washingtons Fish and Wildlife Commission banned genetically engineered fish from marine net pens, but the state has no rules that bar them from land-based tanks or fresh water, said John Kerwin, who manages the states hatchery program. Oregon has similar restrictions, while California bans the creatures entirely - including the fluorescent Glo Fish, a genetically engineered aquarium fish that went on sale last year.

Devlins research for the Canadian government is attempting to unravel the possible effects of genetically engineered food fish before theyre approved.

"Were just starting to gather the kinds of laboratory information which we hope will provide us with understanding about these animals," he said.

He works with coho salmon that overproduce growth hormone as a result of genetic tinkering. Aqua Bountys Atlantic salmon were engineered in a similar way, using genes from chinook salmon and a species called ocean pout.

In both cases, the genetically engineered fish grow much faster than ordinary fish but dont get much bigger at maturity.

At 1 year of age, Devlins gene-engineered fish are 10 times the size of ordinary coho.

For the study reported June 7, Devlin and his colleagues manipulated the amount of food available to the fish. When food was abundant, normal and genetically modified fish coexisted well. It was only when food was scarce that competition turned deadly for the normal fish.

While populations made up only of normal fish were able to ride out food shortages, mixed populations invariably crashed.

But the experiments also revealed another wrinkle: Populations made up of only genetically engineered fish also crashed when food supplies were low.

Does that mean transgenic fish might pose little risk if they escaped into the environment because they would die out when food supplies drop?

Its possible, Devlin said.

"If you had a small population, where the fish couldnt migrate out of the area, transgenic fish might eat themselves out of house and home and there would be no risks," he said.

But on the other hand, if numbers boomed when food was plentiful, the bioengineered fish could devastate normal fish in the cutthroat competition that would ensue.

McGonigle says he hopes to have an FDA ruling within the next two years, but the target date has been pushed back repeatedly.

Because of regulations to protect businesses, the agencys evaluation process is largely secret, leading critics to call for a new system that is open and gives more authority to environmental and wildlife agencies.

"FDA has absolutely no experience with these kinds of issues," said Gurian-Sherman, the Center for Food Safety scientist. "And we know nothing about what theyre doing."

In a head-to-head battle for food, normal coho salmon lose out to their genetically engineered cousins, says a new study that adds to the controversy over what critics call "frankenfish."

Not only did the aggressive, gene-modified salmon gobble up most of the feed when raised in tanks with ordinary salmon, but they also gobbled up their weaker competitors - including their own type, British Columbia scientists reported in the June 7 online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The results were often dramatic population crashes, with only one or two of the genetically modified fish surviving in tanks that originally held 50 animals, said lead author Robert Devlin of Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

"When food supplies are low, transgenic (genetically modified) fish have a very significant effect on the population," he said, adding the caveat that laboratory experiments may not predict what would happen if bioengineered salmon escaped into the environment.

But thats a question that needs to be answered soon.

Massachusetts-based Aqua Bounty Farms has asked the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for approval to market what could be the first transgenic food fish: Atlantic salmon that grow twice as fast as normal fish. Aqua Bounty hopes to raise its transgenic salmon in coastal net pens in the United States and market the eggs around the world, said Joseph McGonigle, vice president for external affairs. "We are constantly hearing from companies that are interested in it," he said.

Faster-growing salmon would cut costs dramatically for fish farmers and lead to lower prices in the supermarket, McGonigle said.

Consumer groups, commercial fishermen and some scientists say studies such as Devlins show the potential ecological consequences of unleashing man-made breeds of fish.

"We should not be taking a risk like this at a time when native salmon stocks are already in trouble," said Doug Gurian-Sherman, senior scientist at the Center for Food Safety, a consumer group based in Washington, D.C.

A 2002 National Academy of Sciences report expressed moderate concern that genetically engineered fish might pose risks to consumers if, for example, a person who was allergic to scallops ate fish with a scallop gene spliced into its DNA. But experts agreed that the biggest danger is that some of the gene-modified fish would inevitably escape into the environment.

Hundreds of thousands of Atlantic salmon have escaped into Northwest waters from salmon farms over the past several years when floating pens were ripped apart by storms or marauding sea lions.

The worst-case scenario involving transgenic fish is the "Trojan gene" hypothesis proposed by Purdue University geneticist William Muir: Genetically engineered salmon outcompete normal fish for food and mates, leading to less-hardy hybrids and the eventual extinction of the entire wild population.

McGonigle says the net pens would hold only sterile females, eliminating the possibility that escapees could breed in the wild. Several other studies, including some in Devlins lab, have shown that the genetically engineered fish arent likely to survive well outside of captivity because theyre more susceptible to disease and oblivious to predators.

"We realize we have no chance of getting approval unless we can clearly demonstrate these fish are completely sterile, and they represent no genetic threat and no behavioral threat, in terms of competition for resources," he said.

Washingtons Fish and Wildlife Commission banned genetically engineered fish from marine net pens, but the state has no rules that bar them from land-based tanks or fresh water, said John Kerwin, who manages the states hatchery program. Oregon has similar restrictions, while California bans the creatures entirely - including the fluorescent Glo Fish, a genetically engineered aquarium fish that went on sale last year.

Devlins research for the Canadian government is attempting to unravel the possible effects of genetically engineered food fish before theyre approved.

"Were just starting to gather the kinds of laboratory information which we hope will provide us with understanding about these animals," he said.

He works with coho salmon that overproduce growth hormone as a result of genetic tinkering. Aqua Bountys Atlantic salmon were engineered in a similar way, using genes from chinook salmon and a species called ocean pout.

In both cases, the genetically engineered fish grow much faster than ordinary fish but dont get much bigger at maturity.

At 1 year of age, Devlins gene-engineered fish are 10 times the size of ordinary coho.

For the study reported June 7, Devlin and his colleagues manipulated the amount of food available to the fish. When food was abundant, normal and genetically modified fish coexisted well. It was only when food was scarce that competition turned deadly for the normal fish.

While populations made up only of normal fish were able to ride out food shortages, mixed populations invariably crashed.

But the experiments also revealed another wrinkle: Populations made up of only genetically engineered fish also crashed when food supplies were low.

Does that mean transgenic fish might pose little risk if they escaped into the environment because they would die out when food supplies drop?

Its possible, Devlin said.

"If you had a small population, where the fish couldnt migrate out of the area, transgenic fish might eat themselves out of house and home and there would be no risks," he said.

But on the other hand, if numbers boomed when food was plentiful, the bioengineered fish could devastate normal fish in the cutthroat competition that would ensue.

McGonigle says he hopes to have an FDA ruling within the next two years, but the target date has been pushed back repeatedly.

Because of regulations to protect businesses, the agencys evaluation process is largely secret, leading critics to call for a new system that is open and gives more authority to environmental and wildlife agencies.

"FDA has absolutely no experience with these kinds of issues," said Gurian-Sherman, the Center for Food Safety scientist. "And we know nothing about what theyre doing."


(all) (at) (au) (br) (ca) (ch) (cn) (cu) (dk) (eg) (eu) (gr) (id) (in) (it) (jm) (jp) (ke) (ls) (my) (nz) (tr) (ug) (uk) (us) (vn) (ww) (za) (zm)

(all) () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () () ().

Woolworths Acquires Macro Wholefoods

Banned Pesticide Blamed For Fish Mutations

EU Assembly Votes to Ban Toxic Pesticides

Obama's Choice of Vilsack: AgriBusiness as Usual at USDA ?

A Cautious Farm and Food Pick

Top Australian Chefs Unite Against GM Food

Organic Milk is Cream of the Crop

Majority of Darjeeling Tea To Go Organic

Nanotechnology - Sweating The Small Stuff

Government of Canada Invests Nearly $1.3 Million in Canadian Organic Industry

Seeds of Discontent

GM Moratorium Lifted in Two Australian States

Organic and Tastier The Rats Nose Knows

A Speyside Organic Whisky Wins the Supreme Title in the 2007 Scottish Food and Drink Excellence Awards

Work Starts on the National Australian Domestic Organic Standard

Long Island Rooting For Natural Landscaping

No Cloned Animals in Organic Food

Quiet Organic Revolution in South Africa

Nitrogen Testing Could Aid Organic Certification

Soil and Health Association Pleased at Organic Bread Victory

Ten Things the EU has Done for the Ordinary Citizen

Eastern European Countries Jumping on Organic Wagon

Whole Foods Market and Wild Oats Marketplace Announce Merger

USDA in Legal Trouble over Industrial Scale Dairies

USDA Appoints Oregonian to National Organic Standards Board

Genetically Modified Hens Containing Human Genes Lay Cancer Fighting Eggs

The Hunt for Natural Food Colours

How Wal Mart Discovered Organic

Canada Announces National Organic Logo and New Regulations

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission Addresses 'Organic' Claims

Tony Blair Choses Organic Over GM Farming

FAO to Hold International Conference on Organic Agriculture and Food Security in 2007

The Battle of DDT

United States to Fund DDT Spraying in Uganda

WHO Gives Indoor Use of DDT a Clean Bill of Health for Controlling Malaria

Escaped Golf Course Grass Frees Gene Genie

How Wal Mart Discovered Organic

Lesotho: Farmers Overcome Child Malnutrition Through Organic Farming

East Africa: Region Seeks to Harmonise Organic Standards by 2007

Organic Food Goes Mass Market

Wal-Mart Targets the Organic Market

America's Whole Foods Market Expands into the United Kingdom

Organic Road To Riches For Chinas First Lady

15th IFOAM Congress Unites Organic World

Uganda Biggest Exporter of Organic Products in Africa

Italian Organic Standards Join Family of IFOAM Standards

The Australian Organic Industry Unites

Turkey Aligns Organic Farming Rules With European Union

Organic Sector Calls for Strict Liability Under the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety

Making San Diego an Edible City

Revealed: Health Fears Over Secret Study Into GM Food

The International Day for Biological Diversity 22 May 2005

Aussies Accused of Double Standards Regarding GM Food Labelling Because of USA

Soil Atlas of Europe: European Soil Quality Declining

The Legacy of Agent Orange in Vietnam

Food Sovereignty - Turning The Global Food System Around

Australian Scientists Develop Enhanced Crops To Feed The Poor Using Traditional Selective Breeding

Bio What? First Comprehensive Public Perception Study of Biotechnology in South Africa

The Zambia Experiment - GM vs Organic

Results of the First Global Review of Earth's Ecosystems.

Apeda Plans To Introduce Group Organic Certification For Small Farmers

Organic Milk Needs A Pasture

Brazil Says 'Yes' to GM Crops and Stem Cell Research

Biowatch Court Victory to Reveal GM Crops in South Africa

South Africa's Stance on GM Foods

Japan Urges Western Australia to Say No to GMO

Monsanto Agrees To $1.5m GM Crop Bribe Penalty In Indonesia

Australia's GM Free Status a Polite Fiction

Joining Resources To Improve Research In Organic Food and Farming

Report Proves That Organic Farming Is Better For Wildlife

Organic Agriculture in Greece

Wriggly Wonder - Culture of the Good Worm

X Games Skater Flips Over Organic Food

Traditional Rice Varieties Ideal For Organic Farming

Genetically Modified Food Is Heading For Your Fridge

Improving Quality Safety and Costs in the European Organic and Low Input Supply Chain

Vietnam's War Against Agent Orange

Genetically Engineered Salmon More Aggressive

European Action Plan for Organic Food and Farming Adopted

Cuba Is A Potential Organic Produce Provider For The USA

The Green Party of New Zealand Launches The Food Revolution Campaign

United States Agriculture Department Rescinds Changes to Organic Food Standards

Shell Be (Organic) Apples

Bush Administration Threatens to Weaken Organic Program

Australia United States Free Trade Agreement

Stockholm Convention on POPs Becomes International Law. Launching a Global Campaign to Eliminate 12 Hazardous Chemicals

The Gene Revolution: Great Potential for the Poor - But no Panacea

Farming Is Not Like Any Old Business

USDA Orders Silence On Mad Cow Disease In Texas

Seaweed to Clean up DDT Contamination

Monsanto Shelves Its Global Plan for Genetically Modified Wheat

Biotech Foods Keep Coming Despite Monsanto Setback

Toxic Pesticides Above Safe Levels in Many U.S. Residents

Explore The Organic Table With Chateau Laurier And Ottawa Symphony

Top Chefs Serve Up Organic Cuisine To Summer Travellers Across America

NSW Rules Out GM Canola Trial

Fourth New Zealand Organic Food And Wine Festival In Oamaru

Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change Comes Into Force

Kim Wilde and the Pleasures of Gardening

Paying To Be Poisoned UK Pesticide Use

New Zealand Launch Of National Organic Standard

Farm Scale Evaluations Of Spring Sown Genetically Modified Crops

Billboards Milk The GM Debate

The GM Nation Report Findings Of The National Debate Is Published

Denmark Bans Glyphosates, The Active Ingredient In Roundup

The Cartagena Protocol On Biosafety Becomes Law

Brussels Rejects Bid For Ban On GM Crops In Austria

Sixty Four Countries Agree On Sustainable Fishing Practices

ANSI To Assess USDA National Accreditation Process

Little Economic Benefit From GM Crops

Europe Sets Rules For Labelling Genetically Modified Food

The European Union Stance On GMO and WTO

Cartegena Protocol On Biosafety Governing International Trade In GMOs To Become Law

EU Ratifies UN Protocol For Genetically Modified Food

Jamaica Looks To Organic Farming

Cuba Enters Market For Organic Products

USWTO Case Against EU On GM Is Misguided

Opening An Organic Restaurant The Paper Work Jungle

United Nations Commission On Sustainable Development Opens Its 2003 Session

Blair Faces Huge Resistance To His Support For GM Crops

Australian State Of NSW Bans Production Of GM Food Until 2006

Insects Thrive on GM Crops

Organic Food To Fight Cancer

Huge Possibilities For New Zealand Organic Exports - Biofach 2003

Global Precedent For Sustainable Agriculture Set By Australias State Of NSW

Chinas Largest Organic Food Base Setup In Qinghai Tibet

Organic Vegetables On Show In Tasmania

New Zealand Organic Food And Wine Festival In Oamaru Goes National

Natural Selection In Egypt

Chimps Go Ape For Organic Bananas

Kailis Has The Good Oil On Expansion

The Fear Of Food - The World Rejects America

Australian Shoppers Prompt Crackdown On GM Food

Heart Of The Country Working To Live In A Dream

Can Beggars Be Choosers

Requiem Agent Orange

Monsanto Hid Decades of PCB Pollution

Ousted Scientist and the Damning Research into Food Safety

First DDT Ban In United states Takes Effect In 1972

NEWS
HOMEhome pageCERTIFYcertification bodies and logosNEWSthe organic newslineNORANational Organic Registry AustraliaPEOPLEpioneers, supporters, membersBOOKSbooksGLOSSARYdefinitions of various termsADDITIVESadditives and linksPESTICIDESthe dirty dozenGMOgenetically modified organismsWHYwhy organic ?ABOUTconstitution, financial, incorporationCONTACTcontact detailsTRANSLATEtranslationsSEARCHsearch results
? 2009 Organic Ltd (ACN 102 995 344). organic.com.au/news/2004.06.14
RSS Feed Atom Feed RSS Feed