Cookies on Environmental Impact

Like most websites we use cookies. This is to ensure that we give you the best experience possible.

 

Continuing to use www.cabi.org  means you agree to our use of cookies. If you would like to, you can learn more about the cookies we use.

Environmental Impact

From climate change to biodiversity loss - documenting human impacts on the environment

Environmental Impact is now available on our new platform, CABI Digital Library. Please note that this website will be discontinued in mid-December, and all access will be automatically redirected to CABI Digital Library.

Take a look at Environmental Impact on CABI Digital Library. 

CABI Book Chapter

Environmental impact of genetically modified crops.

Book cover for Environmental impact of genetically modified crops.

Description

This book, containing 20 chapters, addresses the major concerns of scientists, policy makers, environmental lobby groups and the general public regarding the controversial issue on environmental impact (e.g. on soil and water ecology and nontarget organisms) of transgenic crops, from an editorially neutral standpoint. While the main focus is on environmental impact, food safety issues for both hum...

Chapter 12 (Page no: 265)

Potential wider impact: farmland birds.

Birds are important biodiversity indicators because they depend on a range of invertebrates and plants for food. Farmland bird populations have declined dramatically, especially in Europe, in the latter half of the 20th century due to intensification in agricultural practice. It is important to assess the potential impacts of new technologies, such as genetically modified (GM) crops, on biodiversity given the large amount of funding spent on schemes designed to aid wildlife on farmland. There is not, to my knowledge, any published evidence of direct effects of GM crops on birds. However, there was considerable evidence of potential indirect effects of GM crops on farmland birds available from the recent UK Farm-scale Evaluation (FSE) trials (see Chapter 2, this volume). Results suggested that three out of four varieties of genetically modified herbicide-tolerant (GMHT) crops (spring-sown and winter-sown oilseed rape and sugarbeet) will support between two and three orders of magnitude lower weed abundances than conventionally managed crop varieties. These results were caused by differences in the type of pesticides sprayed on GMHT and conventional crops. For one crop (maize), there were more weeds on the GMHT crop than the conventional variety. Weeds provide key food resources for birds both directly, via seeds, and indirectly, via the invertebrate populations that they support. The declines in weed seed resources reported on the three GMHT crops suggest they have the potential to markedly reduce food resources for farmland birds, although the magnitude of how these changes in food could affect population levels is not currently known. If expensive schemes designed to enhance biodiversity on farmland are not to act in opposition to the environmental effects of GMHT crops then we need new ways of implementing GMHT crops to reduce their effects on weeds.

Other chapters from this book

Chapter: 1 (Page no: 3) Transgenic crops and their applications for sustainable agriculture and food security. Author(s): Christou, P. Capell, T.
Chapter: 2 (Page no: 23) Environmental benefits of genetically modified crops. Author(s): Edwards, M. G. Poppy, G. M.
Chapter: 3 (Page no: 42) Developing a 21st century view of agriculture and the environment. Author(s): Pimentel, D. Paoletti, M. G.
Chapter: 4 (Page no: 61) Environmental risk assessment. Author(s): Tencalla, F. G. Nickson, T. E. Garcia-Alonso, M.
Chapter: 5 (Page no: 74) Insect resistance to genetically modified crops. Author(s): Tabashnik, B. E. Carrière, Y.
Chapter: 6 (Page no: 101) Resistance management of transgenic insect-resistant crops: ecological factors. Author(s): Raymond, B. Wright, D. J.
Chapter: 7 (Page no: 115) Herbicide-tolerant genetically modified crops: resistance management. Author(s): Owen, M. D. K.
Chapter: 8 (Page no: 165) Impact of insect-resistant transgenic crops on aboveground non-target arthropods. Author(s): Romeis, J. Meissle, M. Raybould, A. Hellmich, R. L.
Chapter: 9 (Page no: 199) Impact of genetically modified crops on pollinators. Author(s): Malone, L. A. Burgess, E. P. J.
Chapter: 10 (Page no: 225) Impact of genetically modified crops on soil and water ecology. Author(s): Wheatley, R.
Chapter: 11 (Page no: 240) Biodiversity and genetically modified crops. Author(s): Ammann, K.
Chapter: 13 (Page no: 278) Safety for human consumption. Author(s): Phipps, R. H.
Chapter: 14 (Page no: 296) Biofuels: Jatropha curcas as a novel, non-edible oilseed plant for biodiesel. Author(s): Kohli, A. Raorane, M. Popluechai, S. Kannan, U. Syers, J. K. O'Donnell, A. G.
Chapter: 15 (Page no: 327) European commercial genetically modified plantings and field trials. Author(s): Ortego, F. Pons, X. Albajes, R. Castañera, P.
Chapter: 16 (Page no: 344) Monitoring Bt resistance in the field: China as a case study. Author(s): He, K. L. Wang, Z. Y. Zhang, Y. J.
Chapter: 17 (Page no: 360) Current status of crop biotechnology in Africa. Author(s): George, D.
Chapter: 18 (Page no: 383) Agriculture, innovation and environment. Author(s): Ferry, N. Gatehouse, A. M. R.

Chapter details

  • Author Affiliation
  • School of Biology, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
  • Year of Publication
  • 2009
  • ISBN
  • 9781845934095
  • Record Number
  • 20093074630