The Longest GMO Study found using GMOs increases the use of herbicides
Date:09-19-2016
American researchers have conducted a 14-year study on GM crops. They found GMO farms could increase the use of weed killers while decreasing the use of pest killers.
The Impact of GMOs
Genetically-modified crops are a contentious topic in developed societies because of the ongoing debate on the benefits and environmental drawbacks of creating our own versions of naturally occurring organisms.
Now, researchers have conducted a tremendous study in the field — the longest review of genetically modified crops and pesticide use yet.
The team, which included four academics led by economist Federico Ciliberto of the University of Virginia, studied data taken from 5,000 soybean and 5,000 maize farmers in the U.S. And unlike typical studies that look at data from one or two years, this was a 14-year study from 1998 to 2011.
“The fact that we have 14 years of farm-level data from farmers all over the U.S. makes this study very special,” Ciliberto said in a statement. “We have repeated observations of the same farmers and can see when they adopted genetically modified seeds and how that changed their use of chemicals.”
There are two GMO varieties in maize and soybeans: one kills insects and the other tolerates glyphosate, an herbicide commonly used in weed killers.
The researchers found using more GMOs actually increases the use of herbicides by 28 percent. This is because glyphosate-resistant weeds grow in farms with GMOs.
“In the beginning, there was a reduction in herbicide use,” Ciliberto said, “but over time the use of chemicals increased because farmers were having to add new chemicals as weeds developed a resistance to glyphosate.”
But GMOs also reduced the use of insecticides: maize farmers using GMOs cut down insecticide intake by 11.2 percent. This is mainly because farms have “safe-havens” with no GM crops so insects don’t develop resistance to insecticides.
Environmental Damage
The findings could mean GMOs negatively impact the environment. Increased herbicide use, especially in the levels detected in the study, means more toxic chemicals might be seeping into the surrounding environment.
At the same time, decreased insecticide use has the opposite effect of lessening toxic chemicals in the environment.
These conflicting discoveries demand further study on GMOs and their impact on the environment, farmers, and consumers alike.