| Literature DB >> 26857894 |
Amina Yaqoob1, Ahmad Ali Shahid1, Tahir Rehman Samiullah1, Abdul Qayyum Rao1, Muhammad Azmat Ullah Khan1, Sana Tahir1, Safdar Ali Mirza2, Tayyab Husnain1.
Abstract
Transgenic plants containing Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) genes are being cultivated worldwide to express toxic insecticidal proteins. However, the commercial utilisation of Bt crops greatly highlights biosafety issues worldwide. Therefore, assessing the risks caused by genetically modified crops prior to their commercial cultivation is a critical issue to be addressed. In agricultural biotechnology, the goal of safety assessment is not just to identify the safety of a genetically modified (GM) plant, rather to demonstrate its impact on the ecosystem. Various experimental studies have been made worldwide during the last 20 years to investigate the risks and fears associated with non-target organisms (NTOs). The NTOs include beneficial insects, natural pest controllers, rhizobacteria, growth promoting microbes, pollinators, soil dwellers, aquatic and terrestrial vertebrates, mammals and humans. To highlight all the possible risks associated with different GM events, information has been gathered from a total of 76 articles, regarding non-target plant and soil inhabiting organisms, and summarised in the form of the current review article. No significant harmful impact has been reported in any case study related to approved GM events, although critical risk assessments are still needed before commercialisation of these crops.Entities:
Keywords: Bt crops; biosafety; genetically modified plants; non-target insects; pest control; risk assessment; soil organisms
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26857894 DOI: 10.1002/jsfa.7661
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sci Food Agric ISSN: 0022-5142 Impact factor: 3.638