Associated Press
By
tinkering with genes, scientists
have made tomatoes that stay fresher
longer, crops that are immune to
weedkillers and fish that grow faster.
Now, a genetically engineered insect
is emerging from the lab.
The
first field trial of a biotech insect
a pink bollworm moth that
contains a jellyfish gene
is planned for this summer. The
gene gives the moth larvae a fluorescence.
If
the experiment involving a major
pest for cotton growers goes as
planned, scientists are ready with
their next step: testing a biotech
version, called the "Terminator"
by farmers, that is sterile, but
sexually active; it is designed
to mate with wild relatives and
eliminate their offspring.
Some
3,600 moths with the jellyfish genes
are to be set free under screened
cages in a government-owned cotton
field near Phoenix. The next step
would be to add genes that make
the moths sterile.
"We're
being very, very careful about what
we're doing," said Robert Staten,
an Agriculture Department scientist
who will run the field trial.
The
experiment is being conducted and
regulated by department's Animal
and Plant Health Inspection Service
because of its authority for controlling
plant pests. Staten expects the
agency to grant approval this spring
for the release.
"We're
going to take as conservative an
approach as we can and still move
forward," he said.
Some
biotech critics are alarmed while
some scientists who support the
technology say the government is
not prepared to properly regulate
biotech insects.
Under
development, for example, are disease-preventing
mosquitoes that could deliver vaccines
to the people they bite or carry
their own antibiotics.
"When
you're talking about insects you're
talking about extremely promiscuous
organisms that will mutate and breed
quite uncontrollably," said
Charles Margulis, an anti-biotech
activist with the environmental
group Greenpeace.
He
said there is no guarantee that
an insect designed to be sterile
will turn out that way.
The
pink bollworm moth infects about
500,000 acres of cotton in the Southwest.
Farmers have three options to control
them: spraying a lot of insecticide;
planting an expensive variety of
genetically engineered cotton that
makes its own insecticide; or by
releasing moths sterilized by irradiation.
Irradiated
moths are less effective in areas
with heavy infestation because the
treatment damages the insects so
much that they are slow to mate.
The genetically engineered moth
is designed to have the same sexual
prowess as its wild cousins.
"He'd
be fully sexually aggressive and
go out and meet and breed. He'd
be the first guy in the bars at
night," said John Benson, a
farmer in California's Imperial
Valley and a member of the California
Cotton Pest Control Board, which
has funded the research through
producer fees.
"We
see this as the one sure way to
get eradication," he said.