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Plant Physiology 134:883-888 (2004) © 2004 American Society of Plant Biologists Transgenic Maize and the Evolution of Landrace Diversity in Mexico. The Importance of Farmers' Behavior1International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT), Apartado Postal 6641, 06600 Mexico D.F., Mexico (M.R.B., J.B.); and Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Ave. Agropolis 911, BP 64501, Montpellier cedex 5, 34394 France (J.B.)
The discovery of transgenic products in maize (Zea mays) landraces planted by small-scale Mexican farmers (Quist and Chapela, 2001
Mexican agriculture, including maize production, has a bimodal structure (Bailey and Roberts, 1983
An important concern in assessing the risk of growing a genetically modified crop in its center of domestication (i.e. where its wild relatives are present) is gene flow between the transgenic crop and its wild relatives. Even though data on this subject are limited, the potential impact of such gene flow has been under discussion for some time (Serratos et al., 1997
As a center of maize domestication and diversity (Sanchez et al., 2000
In these systems, multiple maize populations coexist (Bellon and Brush, 1994 If transgenic varieties are introduced into these traditional systems, it is likely that they will be managed like local maize populations. Genes will be exchanged between transgenic varieties and local landraces through pollen flow between plants and by mixing seeds at several steps in the cropping process. This context departs strongly, in genetic and social terms, from the commercial setting for which transgenic varieties were developed and are marketed.
Non-transgenic modern varieties have not been adopted widely in traditional agricultural systems (Morris and López-Pereira, 1999
Theoretically, in traditional systems, a continuous flow of genes from improved varieties to landraces could swamp local maize populations. Evidence to date suggests, however, that multiple populations of improved varieties, creolized varieties, and landraces will coexist, even in areas where improved maize has been widely planted for a long time, as long as traditional management practices persist (Bellon and Brush, 1994 The natural and human factors that control these processes may act antagonistically, making it difficult to foresee precisely how rapidly the transgene might diffuse to local maize populations and how widespread it might become within them. Nevertheless, we can foresee some situations that are rarely considered in risk assessment and management. For example, the new transgene in the local population may cause the population to be better suited to the prevailing natural factors and human preferences (for example, a Bacillus thuringiensis transgene might improve insect resistance). Farmers who recognize the value of the new trait conferred by the transgene will favor its diffusion to the landraces that they value by mixing seed of the transgenic variety with seed from their landraces. The advantage that the transgene confers, however, is likely be only one among many others that farmers appreciate. Rather than reducing diversity, this process may result in the same amount of diversity as before, in terms of alleles and phenotypes, but with a transgenic component.
If biotechnology companies introduce transgenic varieties with different transgenes that were never meant to be in the same plant (and have not been tested together), gene flow could cause individual plants to harbor multiple transgenes (a phenomenon known as gene stacking; Hall et al., 2000
Yet another example involves varieties that are designed and produced with several transgenes, which may or may not be linked (Tran et al., 2003
Regardless of whether transgenes are linked, they will diffuse independently into local populations, according to their own dynamics. In most cases, the transgenes would not express a trait (because parts may be missing) and would remain unnoticed, but in other cases they would express it. The expression of a gene depends on the genetic background in which it exists (Fagard and Vaucheret, 2000 Although the probability of these events may be small (especially the likelihood that maize populations will absorb multiple transgenes that were never tested together and simultaneously express several traits), it is unknown and merits further research. Another scenario that differs from commercial agriculture may occur if transgenes diffuse to landraces and society (or groups in society) regard the landraces as "contaminated." Regardless of whether the transgenes affect diversity (see the discussion in the next section), this value judgment will have a negative impact on landrace diversity. Because it may be difficult and costly to distinguish landraces with and without transgenes, all landraces might be considered "contaminated" and, therefore, devalued. Their diversity would be devalued as well. Careless use of the term "contamination," particularly if there is no evidence of harmful consequences associated with the presence of transgenes, would actually contribute to genetic erosion.
It is unlikely that the presence of transgenes per se will automatically reduce the diversity of alleles in local maize populations or the morphological variants managed by small-scale farmers in Mexico. As mentioned, negative impacts on diversity are more likely to result from the perceptions and values associated with transgenes than from any biological impact. However, as our analysis suggests, the processes that maintain diversity in traditional agricultural systemsgene flow and farmer selectionmay not only foster the diffusion of transgenes to other maize populations but may create situations that have never been considered in the biosafety risk assessments and management protocols used to regulate transgenic varieties in industrialized countries. The processes that create diversity may also generate considerable uncertainty about the impacts of transgenes in farmers' fields and populations. We may see untested new combinations of transgenes, untested, and we may also see the separation of transgenes that are meant to work in combination.
Given this uncertainty, if transgenic varieties are introduced on a large scale into Mexicoparticularly if they include multiple transgenes or transgenes that are not meant to enter the food chain, such as antibodies, fatty acids, or vaccines (Maier, 2002
The case of Starlink maize in the United States (Anonymous, 2003 Diversity also may be threatened by the commercial introduction of transgenic varieties if the intellectual property rights associated with transgenes render some of farmers' traditional practices unacceptable or illegal, at least in principle. As mentioned earlier, these practices, which sustain and create diversity, include seed recycling, seed mixing, and creolization. For example, intellectual property regulations on transgenes may forbid their use by farmers who have not purchased seed of a transgenic variety and signed an agreement with the owners of the transgenes or their agents. Such regulations may be violated by farmers whose traditional practices favor the diffusion of transgeneseven unknowinglyinto their populations. Clearly, these issues are beyond the scope of this paper, and farmers' liability would depend on the legislation and regulations applied to transgenes in Mexico, but these concerns merit careful consideration.
The alarm over the diffusion of transgenes into landraces has highlighted the importance of the conservation of maize diversity and concerns over its loss. Mexico is a center of diversity because small-scale farmers continue to plant (and, one could argue, create and maintain) multiple, distinct maize populations. The processes that threaten diversity are more complex than the "simple" replacement of landraces by modern varieties, and they go beyond the potential impacts of transgenes in local agroecosystems. These processes include the abandonment of maize cultivation altogether as farmers migrate or shift to other crops, the aging of the farming population, and the lack of interest in agriculture among young people, particularly if they are better educated.
If society values the maize diversity in Mexico's traditional agricultural systems and is committed to its conservationas the great concern over the impact of transgenes on maize diversity suggestsit should be willing to invest in small-scale farmers' efforts to maintain that diversity. There are ways to support these efforts (Bellon, 2004
Although the potential impacts of transgenes on diversity are particularly significant in the Mexican context, many of the issues addressed in this paper can apply to other countries and crop species, especially where farmers save seed and/or rely on other farmers to obtain it. Under these conditions, genetic migration and recombination will influence the genetic structure of crop populations, particularly landraces, regardless of whether they are grown in centers of domestication and/or diversity.
More than one-half of the maize area in non-temperate environments of the developing world was still planted to farmer-saved seed in the late 1990s (Morris, 2002
Although for most of these areas we lack the rich descriptions and understanding of farmers' practices that we have for Mexico, it is logical to hypothesize that some similar practices may exist. For example, Sanou et al. (1997 Although transgenic varieties of maize, soybeans (Glycine max), and cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) are the most common transgenic varieties currently available to farmers, in the near future they will have access to transgenic versions of other major food crops, including rice (Oryza sativa), bread wheat (Triticum aestivum), and potatoes (Solanum tuberosum). Maize is a cross-pollinating crop, rice and wheat are self-pollinating crops, and potatoes are generally clonally propagated, which means that genetic migration and recombination occur at a much lower rate in rice, wheat, and potatoes than in maize. Even so, many of the issues related to the diffusion of transgenes in local populations may still be quite relevant. Small-scale farmers in many parts of the developing world still plant landraces of rice, wheat, and potatoes, sometimes along with modern varieties. Many of these farmers save seed or planting stocks (e.g. potato tubers) and rely on informal seed systems.
About 29% of the rice area in Asia is still planted to landraces, though this aggregate figure may underestimate the area planted in particular countries (Hossain et al., 2003
Rice varieties collected in farmers' fields in parts of India and the Philippines have presented a combination of different genotypes (International Rice Research Institute [IRRI], 2000 Given that farmers' practices in some traditional rice systems encourage gene flow between different types of rice, it is very likely that if these farmers plant transgenic rice, some gene flow to other varieties and species can be expected.
The data for wheat are more limited, but there is certainly evidence that landraces and improved varieties coexist in the systems of small-scale farmers in areas with a long history of wheat cultivation and that farmers save and select seed (Meng, 1997 Like rice, wheat is a self-pollinating crop. Although the rate of outcrossing is much lower in wheat than in maize (or other cross-pollinating crops), it can be greatly influenced by soil quality and other agroecological conditions (R. Trethowan, personal communication). The rice research described previously suggests that similar processes may occur in wheat, but research has been limited in wheat. Additional studies are needed to gain a better idea of the prospective dynamics of commercial transgenic wheat varieties in traditional systems.
Many of the factors analyzed here may even be relevant for a clonally propagated crop such as potato in traditional agricultural systems in its center of diversity. A study with Andean potatoes using isozymes and phenotypic characteristics showed considerable gene flow between cultivars of different morphological groups (Quiros et al., 1992
The potential impacts of the commercial introduction of transgenic maize in Mexico should not be analyzed in biological terms alone. As we have seen, the analysis must take farmers' behavior and practices into account because they have a considerable influence on how transgenes may diffuse into local maize populations. Although the management practices and other conditions prevailing in Mexican farmers' traditional maize systems are maintained, the cultivation of transgenic varieties is not likely to reduce diversity in those systems. Even so, negative perceptions of transgenes and social and economic changes in traditional agricultural systems may have deleterious impacts on the diversity of maize landraces. The cultivation of transgenic maize varieties in traditional systems may also create situations that have not been considered in the biosafety risk assessments conducted in commercial agricultural systems in the industrialized world. These issues that have emerged for maize in Mexico are likely to be relevant to other countries and food crops, including rice, wheat, and potatoes, and they merit further study.
We would like to thank Kelly Cassaday for providing much-appreciated editorial assistance. Received December 22, 2003; returned for revision December 24, 2003; accepted December 24, 2003.
http://www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.103.038331.
1 The views expressed in this paper are the authors' and do not necessarily represent policies of their respective organizations. * Corresponding author; e-mail m.bellon{at}cgiar.org; fax 525558047558.
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Tran TCH, Al-Babili S, Schaub P, Potrykus I, Beyer P (2003) Golden Indica and Japonica rice lines amenable to deregulation. Plant Physiol 133: 161-169 This article has been cited by other articles:
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