| Literature DB >> 24046097 |
Paul K Keese1, Andrea V Robold, Ruth C Myers, Sarah Weisman, Joe Smith.
Abstract
Current approaches to environmental risk assessment of genetically modified (GM) plants are modelled on chemical risk assessment methods, which have a strong focus on toxicity. There are additional types of harms posed by plants that have been extensively studied by weed scientists and incorporated into weed risk assessment methods. Weed risk assessment uses robust, validated methods that are widely applied to regulatory decision-making about potentially problematic plants. They are designed to encompass a broad variety of plant forms and traits in different environments, and can provide reliable conclusions even with limited data. The knowledge and experience that underpin weed risk assessment can be harnessed for environmental risk assessment of GM plants. A case study illustrates the application of the Australian post-border weed risk assessment approach to a representative GM plant. This approach is a valuable tool to identify potential risks from GM plants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24046097 PMCID: PMC4204014 DOI: 10.1007/s11248-013-9745-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transgenic Res ISSN: 0962-8819 Impact factor: 2.788
Likelihood of correct regulatory decision to approve or reject introduction of test plant species countries (adapted from Gordon et al. 2008)
| Status of test species | Number of species approved | Number of species rejected | % of correct decisions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Major invasive species | 4 | 326 | 99 |
| Non-invasive species | 382 | 41 | 90 |
Data is pooled from separate weed risk assessment tests in Australia, New Zealand, Hawaii and Pacific Islands, the Czech Republic, the Bonin Islands of Japan and Florida. Regulatory decisions to require further information are excluded
PBWRA of a hypothetical insect resistant and herbicide tolerant GM cotton, and relevant comparators
| Land use | Plant | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| Impact question: could the plant affect the health of animals and/or people? | ||
| Nature reserve | Non-GM cotton |
|
| GM cotton |
| |
| Irrigated/dryland agriculture | Non-GM cotton |
|
| GM cotton |
| |
| Invasiveness question: what is the plant’s ability to survive to reproduction despite herbivory or pathogenesis? | ||
| Nature reserve | Non-GM cotton |
|
| GM cotton |
| |
| Irrigated/dryland agriculture | Non-GM cotton |
|
| GM cotton |
| |
| Invasiveness question: what is the plant’s tolerance to average weed management practices in the land use? | ||
| Nature reserve | Non-GM cotton |
|
| GM cotton |
| |
| Irrigated/dryland agriculture | Non-GM cotton |
|
| GM cotton |
| |
Only impact or invasiveness questions where the GM cotton differs from its parent species are listed
Fig. 1Components of a risk scenario
List of example risk scenarios postulated for insect resistant and herbicide tolerant GM cotton