Feral oilseed rape is not a relevant source of macroscopic impurity at its present density in the landscape but provides opportunity for genetic recombination, stacking of transgenes and the evolution of genotypes that under strong selection pressure could increase and re-occupy fields to constitute an economic weed burden and impurity in future crops.
One of the main concerns about the commercial release of transgenic crops is the likelihood of transgene spread from cultivated species into wild relatives. This question is relevant for oilseed rape/canola (Brassica napus, AACC, 2n=38), as this species is partially allogamous with several wild relatives that are often sympatric with oilseed rape production. A workshop sponsored by the European Science Foundation (11-13 June 2001, Rennes, France) was held: (i) to identify the main weeds present in European and North American countries; (ii) to review results on the ability of oilseed rape to hybridize and backcross with wild relatives; (iii) to review the usefulness and limitations of the tools available for monitoring interspecific hybridization and gene introgression; and (iv) to provide recent results on modelling of gene flow.
In 2003, the European Commission established the principle of coexistence which refers to "the ability of farmers to make a practical choice between conventional, organic and GM-crop production, in compliance with the legal obligations for labelling and/or purity standards" and laid down guidelines defining the context of this coexistence 1 . In order to determine what is needed for the sustainable introduction of GM crops in Europe, the cross-disciplinary SIGMEA Research Project was set up to create a science-based framework to inform decision-makers. SIGMEA has (i) collated and analysed European data on gene flow and the environmental impacts of the major crop species which are likely to be transgenic in the future (maize, rapeseed, sugar beet, rice, and wheat), (ii) designed predictive models of gene flow at the landscape level, (iii) analysed the technical feasibility and economic impacts of coexistence in the principal farming regions of Europe, (iv) developed novel GMO detection methods, (v) addressed legal issues related to coexistence, and (vi) proposed public and farm scale decisionmaking tools, as well as guidelines regarding management and governance. This publishable version of the final activity report of the FP6 SIGMEA research project, covers the fourteen major issues under investigation.
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