
SANET Post
Pollen drift is important - especially if your conventional neighbors are
planting Bt corn, but please don't underestimate the potential for pollen
drift in your own 'non-GM' field - because most of the corn seed we are
planting this year is contaminated with 'Adventitious transgenic presence'
at a low level.
In a cross-pollinated/wind-pollinated plant like corn, the pollen is
designed to travel - it is lightweight, plentiful and is shed up in the air
currents where it can easily be picked up and carried.
There are many factors involved in determining the degree of potential
pollen drift and contamination potential.
These include biological considerations -
In other words, it is hard to generalize how far pollen can travel - it
depends on many factors that can change momentarily, and are very localized.
Dr. Allison Snow at Ohio State University states that, in general, bees can
spread a greater quantity of pollen away from the parent plant, possibly up
to several miles, while wind can spread a smaller amount of pollen
remarkably far from the parent plant. In either case, it is inevitable that
some pollen will travel out of the field.
Studies using Vaseline-coated microscope slides have detected over 2500 corn
pollen grains per square meter at a distance of 60 meters from the parent
plant.
Studies from the John Innes Institute in England ("Organic Farming and Gene
Transfer from Genetically Modified Crops" by Catherine Moyes and Philip
Dale, 1999 ) has shown that pollen from clover has been detected more than
1,600m (about 1 mile) from its source, from plants in the cabbage family
over 1,500m (0.93 miles) away, and from beets and grasses at more than
1,000m (0.62 miles). Other studies have documented corn pollen drift up to
150km (93 miles) from its source, other research has shown that the distance
may be much greater under certain weather conditions.
In the Midwest, some experts feel that there is a virtual umbrella of corn
pollen over the whole area at corn pollination time, much of it Bt corn.
This is not enough to effectively pollinate a crop for even kernel
production, but it is enough to skew the genetics - and enough to make any
kind of buffer virtually ineffective.
Dale Wilson has done some work with pollen drift patterns and distances -
maybe he can help out here with additional information. He did give me one
useful bit of information earlier this year -
** On an ear of corn, the silks connected to the middle-of-the-ear kernels
tend to emerge first, pretty much simultaneously, and because of this, they
are most likely to be pollinated by whatever the intended male parent is.
These will then produce what is called in the trade, the 'flat' seed.
The silks emerging later - connected to the tip and butt kernels - are more
likely to be 'adventitiously pollinated' by other pollen that is in the air.
These will produce the 'round' seed - small rounds from the tip, large
rounds from the butt. It has been sometimes shown that round seed tend to
have lower vigor during germination - the small rounds due to incomplete
maturity or damage and the large rounds due to slower water imbibition
during germination and possibly a greater potential for mechanical damage
during harvest.
** What does that mean to farmers wanting to avoid buying contaminated corn
seed? Ask for medium flat seed. In doing this, you will get corn that is
least likely to be contaminated, and will also get the seed that is usually
most vigorous and fastest to germinate too!
Hope this helps a little - if nothing else but to say, there is probably no
way to buffer totally against pollen drift, especially if you live in an
area where Bt/RR corn is grown and if you are buying hybrid corn seed that
is coming to your farm and onto your fields pre-contaminated.
Mary-Howell
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Last Updated on 4/24/01 Email: information@biotech-info.net |
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