Originally posted by kentonio
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Originally posted by pchang View PostThen, there is GMO corn that is resistant to Roundup herbicide. Its purpose is to increase the sales and use of Roundup herbicide. This usefulness is highly debatable and has a host of potentially adverse effects.
The usefulness itself is not debatable. If the Roundup Ready crops weren't useful, farmers wouldn't buy them. The only realistic concern with glyphosate is that some weeds are developing resistance to it, just like antibiotic resistant bacteria.John Brown did nothing wrong.
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There have been higher levels than normal of cancer and birth defects in farm workers over the last 20 years or so. Many of them have been exposed to low levels over very long periods (not the high dose over short periods used in animal models).
The usefulness of Roundup is that it make high intensity machine farming more productive. But, this benefit may be a short term one. There is evidence that high intensity machine farming's high yields have been harder and harder to achieve over the long run.“It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”
― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man
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Originally posted by pchang View PostThere have been higher levels than normal of cancer and birth defects in farm workers over the last 20 years or so. Many of them have been exposed to low levels over very long periods (not the high dose over short periods used in animal models).
The usefulness of Roundup is that it make high intensity machine farming more productive. But, this benefit may be a short term one. There is evidence that high intensity machine farming's high yields have been harder and harder to achieve over the long run.John Brown did nothing wrong.
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We need more herbicide resistant crops, with a wider range of herbicides that have herbicide resistant crops, not less.
The benefits of herbicides in general are they allow for growing crops with less (and sometimes no) soil tillage, allow for more yield per unit of area, reduce the amount of mechanical energy used to grow a crop, and are better for soil fertility (less compaction, less erosion/runoff) compared to the alternative (mechanical cultivation). This means cheaper food which is still very important for many people around the world.
There are drawbacks to herbicides; soil contamination, runoff contamination (worst with tilling actually), health issues for workers. But those aren't problems with GMO, since herbicides are used in many other applications. Even when using mechanical tillage herbicides are still likely to be used. Eco-friendly applications like no-till wheat also rely on herbicides.
The main harm right now from Roundup Ready is that since there are only very limited GMO crops with resistances to herbicides, and they mostly are Roundup, this pushes farmers towards using Roundup and growing Roundup Ready crops more than they should. This means lots of corn and soybeans and we're left trying to shoehorn those into products where they probably shouldn't be just because they're so cheap. It also means that farmers are more likely to ignore the science and use soley Roundup on serial cereal crops, leading to increased resistance within pest plant populations, increased pest problems in general, and soil fertility problems.
So to mitigate the harm of herbicide resistant GM crops, what we actually need is accelerated development of herbicide resistant crops and a wider spectrum of herbicides that can be fit into such a system. Then we're more likely to see proper crop and herbicide rotation. This leads to less buildup of any given chemical, less resistant within weed populations so less volume of herbicide used.Last edited by Aeson; June 2, 2014, 22:35.
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Oncle Boris is becoming a true contender for Dinner's title.“It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”
― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man
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Originally posted by Oncle Boris View PostOf course, intensive agriculture and products meant to muster it have nothing to do with soil depletion.
No till crops are possible (at least while being economically viable) because of herbicides. GM crops can allow for even more no-till options in the future.
You're going at this all wrong. We need more intensive agriculture, not less. This is the way to increase output without increasing footprint (physical dimensions, energy use, emissions/runoff), or even increase output while decreasing footprint.
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