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A growing number of rootworms are now able to devour genetically modified corn specifically designed by Monsanto to kill those same pests. A new study shows that while the biotech giant may triumph in Congress, it will never be able to outsmart nature.
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.
Originally posted by LightAssassin
reply to post by wewillnotcomply666
Brilliant stuff. Pity the source is RT but I trust nature will do its bit in the near future anyway.
When pondering the above all I can see is Jeff Goldblum in Jurassic Park saying 'Nature always finds a way'.edit on 1-7-2012 by LightAssassin because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by MeesterB
monsanto=artifical evolution
Natural selection=natural evolution.
Just gotta wait for corn v2.0, then wait for worms, ect, to catch up.
Same idea as with drug resistant infections popping up in hospitals.
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 wasthe 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 Studi
Originally posted by LightAssassin
reply to post by wewillnotcomply666
Brilliant stuff. Pity the source is RT but I trust nature will do its bit in the near future anyway.
When pondering the above all I can see is Jeff Goldblum in Jurassic Park saying 'Nature always finds a way'.edit on 1-7-2012 by LightAssassin because: (no reason given)
In several U.S. states, Western corn rootworms are developing resistance to a Bt protein produced by certain varieties of genetically modified Bt maize. In response, twenty-two leading scientists in the field of pest control in maize farming addressed a joint letter to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) at the beginning of March. Among other things they criticize the lack of adequate resistance management and the marketing strategies of the big companies. The scientists call for integrated pest control that includes the cultivation of Bt maize.