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Old 26-04-2003, 12:25 PM
 
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Default Greed driving plant science



Oz wrote:

writes


Oz wrote:

writes
...
They thought the same in USA. The GM corn ended up in México.
Corn can travel across continents, and does so regularly.

You may not have noticed, but there is something called 'the atlantic'
between europe and mexico whilst there is nothing but a bit of barbed
wire between the US and mexico.


Corn can travel in ships across the Atlantic, the Pacific or the Indian Ocean.


1) Not seed corn. That would be restricted.
2) Please inform me of the last time europe shipped maize to the
americas?


milling is done wherever is cheaper or convenient.
I am not connected to the cargo databases to know when was the last time
that europe shipped maize anywhere. But if europe had a load of rotten
maize somewhere in europe, I bet it ended up somewhere in the third world.




Further GM corn was being grown in mexico, so little need to 'travel


This corn was exported legally from the USA to Mexico. Was supposed to
be milled but ended up in mexican markets.


The scientific american article said it was commercial seed from some
distance away (about 10km IIRC).

across continents'. IIRC in the quoted work it merely had to travel a
few tens of km.

What it does show, though, is that genes from modern cultivars of maize
will affect 'legacy' maize, and presumably has been doing so for many
decades.


Any pig virus genes found naturally in teocinte?


Any pig virus genes in commercial cultivars?
Would teosinte care? Probably not.


Would the mexican farmers care? Probably yes.
What about jews and muslim people? would they care if there are pig genes
in their bread? would you care if grampa's genes where in your pigs?
Have we been dealing with this problems before?

It's been dealing with new genes for millennia.

--
Oz
This post is worth absolutely nothing and is probably fallacious.
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