2017
DOI: 10.3389/fenvs.2017.00060
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Complex Outcomes from Insect and Weed Control with Transgenic Plants: Ecological Surprises?

Abstract: Agriculture is fundamental for human survival through food production and is performed in ecosystems that, while simplified, still operate along ecological principles and retain complexity. Agricultural plants are thus part of ecological systems, and interact in complex ways with the surrounding terrestrial, soil, and aquatic habitats. We discuss three case studies that demonstrate how agricultural solutions to pest and weed control, if they overlook important ecological and evolutionary factors, cause "surpri… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Modeling and detailed field studies would still be needed to understand why GM maize in North America threatens the monarch butterfly (Stenoien et al, 2018)-similar studies are sorely lacking in Europe (but see Holst et al, 2013). Conditions in the current European cultivated landscapes are rarely favorable for butterflies (Bubova et al, 2015), and additional changes in landscapes and cultivation practices, both of which will be unavoidable under widespread GM crop cultivation (Bøhn & Lövei, 2017), will be unlikely to improve the current suboptimal situation for butterflies. Butterfly diversity is still high in some agricultural settings in Europe, for example, in Romania (Loos et al, 2014(Loos et al, , 2015, and GM crop cultivation could affect this high level of species richness.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Modeling and detailed field studies would still be needed to understand why GM maize in North America threatens the monarch butterfly (Stenoien et al, 2018)-similar studies are sorely lacking in Europe (but see Holst et al, 2013). Conditions in the current European cultivated landscapes are rarely favorable for butterflies (Bubova et al, 2015), and additional changes in landscapes and cultivation practices, both of which will be unavoidable under widespread GM crop cultivation (Bøhn & Lövei, 2017), will be unlikely to improve the current suboptimal situation for butterflies. Butterfly diversity is still high in some agricultural settings in Europe, for example, in Romania (Loos et al, 2014(Loos et al, , 2015, and GM crop cultivation could affect this high level of species richness.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Crop improvement through genetic engineering has given the feasibility to engineer plants to combat herbicides being sprayed and thus help in the safety of the crops without major yield losses (Benbrook, 2016;Bohn and Lovei, 2017). Various genes that confer herbicide tolerance have been identified, validated, and introgressed into a multitude of crops including cotton (Awan et al, 2015;Liang et al, 2017;Zhang et al, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Contrasting evidence of effects on non-targets, ranging from unobservable effects of intake of Bt transgenic crops [41,42,43,44], to number of harmful effects (viz. delay in development, reduction in weight gain, changes in behavior or increased mortality) on beneficial organisms like pollinators [45], non-target arthropods [46,47,48], parasitoids [49] and predators [50,51] are present.…”
Section: Impact Of Bt Toxins On Non Targeted Organismsmentioning
confidence: 99%