Published on Wednesday, October 3, 2012 by Common
Dreams
- Common Dreams staff
Genetically-engineered
crops have created more herbicide-resistant weeds—or "superweeds"—
and increased, rather than decreased, the use of pesticides and herbicides such
as Roundup, according to a new study published in Environmental Sciences Europe.
A theatrical protest in Mexico City against genetically modified
corn. Scores of people took to the streets of the capital Saturday, including
this man, dressed as an arch-capitalist. They are denouncing a government
decision to allow multi-national companies to grow genetically altered corn.
Protestors say the decision would drive the country's small corn producers into
bankruptcy and imperil Mexico's native varieties of corn. (Photo: Reuters).While the genetically-engineered crops, such
as corn, soybeans and cotton, have been commercially successful, the use of
technology led to a 527 million pound increase in the use of herbicide in the
United States between 1996 and 2011, according to the study.
"Impacts of
genetically engineered crops on pesticide use in the U.S.—the first sixteen
years," and overall pesticide use increased by an estimated 404 million
pounds, or about 7 percent, study author Charles M. Benbrook said.
Glyphosate, marketed
as Roundup, is one of several broad-spectrum herbicides used to kill weeds, according to
the online journal Phys.org. Approximately 95 percent of soybean and cotton
acres, and over 85 percent of corn, are genetically modified to be herbicide
resistant, according to Phys.org.
The study concluded
that over-reliance on herbicides and the emergence of "supersedes"
caused farmers to increase their use of herbicides and add new forms of them.
Weeds with natural
resistance then spread quickly when farmers relied too heavily on a single
weedkiller, the BBC reported.
"There are now
two-dozen weeds resistant to glyphosate … and many of these are spreading
rapidly," an analysis of the study by Washington State University said. "Millions
of acres are infested with more than one glyphosate-resistant weed. The
presence of resistant weeds drives up herbicide use by 25% to 50%, and
increases farmer-weed control costs by at least as much."
One solution to
resistance could be a new type of genetically modified crop that uses a
weedkiller once used in the defoliant Agent Orange, which was used during the
Vietnam War, according to
the BBC.
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