“…Hence, the three species of the subgenus Soja are capable of cross-pollination and the hybrid seed that is produced can germinate normally and produce plants with fertile pollen and seed (Abe et al, 1999, Nakayama andYamaguchi, 2002). However, since Glycine soja and Glycine gracilis are indigenous to China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, the Far East Region of Russia, Australia, the Philippines and South Pacific, and since they have not been reported in other parts of the world, where the cultivated soybean is grown (Dorokhov et al, 2004, Lu, 2005, the plant to plant gene transfer from soybean is restricted to cultivated areas and the occasional soybean plants resulting from seed spillage in the EU.…”