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New findings on transgene flow mediated by flower-visiting insectsqrcode

Jul. 7, 2014

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Jul. 7, 2014
New findings concerning about flower-visiting insects and their potential impact on transgene flow in rice, has been introduced in the column of Research Highlights of Nature. This finding was published by research team led by Professor Chen Xuexin of the College of Agriculture and Biotechnology of Zhejiang University. 
 
Rice is one of the most important crops in the world. Several transgenic varieties of rice have been developed, and some have recently entered pre-production trials. One concern with genetically modified (GM) crops is transgene escape, but prior studies suggest this risk is low for rice because it is self-pollinated and the dispersal of pollen by wind is limited.
 
A 2-year nationwide survey was carried out in China, which identified more than 510 insect species that visited rice flowers. Honeybees, hoverflies and several other species carried large amounts of pollen. The European honeybee Apis mellifera visited rice flowers regularly with daily foraging activity peaking between 12.00 and 13.00 h.
 
20 European honeybee colonies, located 100–1000 meters away from rice fields in mixed agricultural landscapes, were monitored and the honeybees were found to carry viable pollen at least 500 meters away from the rice pollen source.
 
Four GM rice lines were used as pollen donors, their non-GM parental varieties as pollen recipients and the European honeybee as the pollinator in field-cage experiments to assess whether honeybees replica watches increase the frequency of gene flow in rice. Results from screening over 1.5 million germinated offspring seeds over a 3-year study period showed that honeybees significantly increase transgene flow in rice.
 
The results indicate that a remarkably high diversity of insects visit rice flowers in China and that hundreds of species including honeybees carry large amounts of rice pollen. European honeybees carry viable pollen over long distances, forage on rice flowers regularly and increase the frequency of transgene flow. Insects mediate gene flow in rice more than previously assumed, and this should be taken into consideration during the ecological risk assessment of transgene flow in self-pollinated and/or anemophilous crops.
 

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