Controversies in Biotechnology
Controversies in Biotechnology
Controversies in Biotechnology
BIOTECHNOLOGY
Monarch butterfly
Monarch Butterfly
The Monarch butterfly is a stunning
species with many people following them
during their lives. They exhibit a certain
beauty throughout all of their life stages
and their migration is fascinating to most
everyone that studies them.
The fact that their numbers are decreasing
has scientists, gardeners, and wildlife
enthusiasts concerned and looking for
ways to preserve these amazing creatures.
Monarch Butterfly
Scientific Classification
Kingdom : : Animalia
Phylum : : Arthropoda
Class : : Insecta
Order : : Lepidoptera
Family : : Nymphalidae
Genus : : Danaus
Species : : D. Plexippus
Monarch Butterfly Migration
Guinness world record – 2880 Miles
Climate Change
Especially during the last decade, changes in
climate have resulted in more out-of-season storms,
severe temperature drops and excessive rain. The
combination of both wet and cold is deadly and has
resulted in the deaths of hundreds of millions of
butterflies.
Factors that kill monarch
butterfly
Parasite
Tachinid flies-These parasitic flies lay tiny eggs on
monarch caterpillars.
The hatching maggots
burrow inside the
caterpillar and feed from
the inside out, eventually
killing it.
Bacillus thuringiensis (BT)
This naturally-occurring bacteria is used in
powders and sprays to protect food crops. It has
become a widely used pest management tool to
control the spread of gypsy moth caterpillars in
spring, with all other caterpillars (including
monarchs) becoming collateral damage.
When ingested, BT ruptures the gut lining of
monarch caterpillars. The irritated caterpillar stops
eating and will die within a few days.
Monarch butterflies and Bt corn
Prior to the registration of insecticidal Bt corn plants (plants
containing genes from the bacterium B. thuringiensis) that
express proteins toxic to some insects, the EPA conducted risk
assessments of the potential effects of Bt endotoxins on a wide
range of organisms including birds, aquatic invertebrates, honey
bees, ladybugs, earthworms, springtails, other non‐target
organisms and endangered species.
The future development and use of agricultural biotechnology
has been challenged by two preliminary studies indicating
potential risk to monarch butterfly populations by pollen from
corn engineered to express proteins from Bacillus thuringiensis.
Monarch butterflies and Bt corn
Exposure to Bt proteins by lepidopterous larvae
was considered to be primarily due to ingestion of
leaf tissue of Bt corn plants, and insects feeding on
these plants would be considered pests. Another
method of exposure to lepidopterous larvae would
be through pollen deposits.
Monarch butterflies
and Bt corn
In 1999, researchers at Cornell University did a
preliminary lab study on the effects of Bt corn pollen on
monarch caterpillars. The lead researcher, Dr. John Losey,
sent a description of the study to the editors of the science
journal Nature (Volume 399, 20 May 1999, page 214).
In Dr. Losey's study, monarch caterpillars in a laboratory
were fed milkweed leaves that had been dusted with
pollen from Bt corn. This was done because wind-borne
corn pollen can settle on the leaves of milkweed plants,
and milkweed is all that monarch caterpillars eat.
Milkweed often grows in meadows or untilled fields and can be found in
or near corn fields. Dr. Losey wanted to determine whether pollen
from Bt corn would affect monarch caterpillars. His study found that " …
larvae of the monarch butterfly on milkweed leaves dusted with
transgenic Bt-corn pollen ate less, grew more slowly, and suffered higher
mortality than those fed leaves dusted with untransformed corn pollen or
leaves without pollen.“
Some people understood the results of the lab study to mean
that Bt corn harms monarch caterpillars, but other scientists pointed out
that the study may not accurately reflect what would happen in a field
of Bt corn.
• There were higher amounts of Bt pollen on the milkweed leaves in
the lab than there would be found in a field;
• In the lab, caterpillars were limited to eating only leaves covered in
corn pollen, whereas in a field, caterpillars may be able to avoid
pollen-coated leaves.
As a result of Dr. Losey's findings, some scientists decided to
combine their research on this topic and produced a large
body of peer-reviewed work on monarch butterflies
and Bt corn, which was published in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). These studies
concluded that monarch butterflies exposed to Bt corn in the
environment are not subjected to any significant risk.
The
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