Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Medical and Hospital News .




FARM NEWS
Smithsonian reports GMO soybean pollen threatens Mexican honey sales
by Staff Writers
Panama City, Panama (SPX) Feb 11, 2014


Dolores Piperno, STRI Staff scientist emerita, measures a teosinte plant. Teosinte grown under past climate conditions looks more like corn than wild teosinte found in Mexico today.

Mexico is the fourth largest honey producer and fifth largest honey exporter in the world. A Smithsonian researcher and colleagues helped rural farmers in Mexico to quantify the genetically modified organism (GMO) soybean pollen in honey samples rejected for sale in Germany. Their results will appear Feb. 7 in the online journal, Scientific Reports.

David Roubik, senior staff scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, and colleagues developed the ability to identify pollen grains in honey in Panama and in Mexico during the 1980s and 1990s when they studied the effects of the arrival of Africanized bees on native bees.

"Nobody else can do this kind of work in the 'big field' environment and be confident that what they are seeing are soybean pollen grains," said Roubik. They found that six honey samples from nine hives in the Campeche region contained soy pollen in addition to pollen from many wild plant species. The pollen came from crops near the bee colonies in several small apiaries.

Due to strict European regulations, rural farmers in the Mexican Yucatan face significant price cuts or outright rejection of their honey crop when their product contains pollen from GMO crops that are not for human consumption. The regional agricultural authorities, furthermore, seemed unaware that bees visited flowering soybeans to collect nectar and pollen.

"As far as we could determine, every kind of GMO soybean grown in Campeche is approved for human consumption," said Roubik. "But honey importers sometimes do no further analysis to match GMO pollen grains with their source."

To test the honey for GMO pollen, researchers from the Smithsonian, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur la Universidad Autonoma de Yucatan and el Instituto Nacional de Investigaciones Forestales, Agropecuarias y Pecuarias sent the nine samples to Intertek laboratory in Bremen, Germany, for genetic analysis. Two samples tested positive for GMO pollen.

"We cautiously interpret these results as significant for elsewhere in Mexico where some five times the GMO soy grown in Campeche is found and beekeeping is alive and well, not to mention the rest of the world," said Roubik. "Bee colonies act as extremely sensitive environmental indicators.

Bees from a single colony may gather nectar and pollen resources from flowers in a 200-square-kilometer area. With an economy based on subsistence agriculture associated with honey production, the social implications of this shift in the status of honey are likely to be contentious and have profound implications for beekeeping in general."

Villanueva-Gutierrez, R., Echazarreta-Gonzalez, C., Roubik, D.W., Moguel-Ordonez, Y.B. 2014. Transgenic soybean pollen (Glycine max L.) in honey from the Yucatan peninsula, Mexico. Scientific Reports. Online.

.


Related Links
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FARM NEWS
UM Research Shows Converting Land to Agriculture Reduces Carbon Uptake
Bozeman, MT (SPX) Feb 11, 2014
University of Montana researchers examined the impact that converting natural land to cropland has on global vegetation growth, as measured by satellite-derived net primary production, or NPP. They found that measures of terrestrial vegetation growth actually decrease with agricultural conversion, which has important implications for terrestrial carbon storage. Postdoctoral researcher Bill ... read more


FARM NEWS
Bottom-up insight into crowd dynamics

British flood victims angry at lack of help

With billboards, tweets, Philippines thanks world for typhoon aid

Floating school offers hope in Nigeria's 'slum on stilts'

FARM NEWS
Lockheed Martin Powers On Second GPS 3 Satellite In Production

India to launch three navigation satellites this year

NGC Wins Contract For GPS-Challenged Navigation and Geo-Registration Solution

20th Anniversary of Initial Operational Capability of the GPS Constellation

FARM NEWS
Dating is refined for the Atapuerca site where Homo antecessor appeared

Footprints found in British rocks said oldest ever outside of Africa

Experiments show human brain uses one code for space, time, distance

Researchers discover how brain regions work together, or alone

FARM NEWS
Social or Stinky? New study reveals how animal defenses evolve

US bans commercial ivory trade

New plant species a microcosm of biodiversity

Discovery opens up new areas of microbiology, evolutionary biology

FARM NEWS
January worst month in China's human H7N9 outbreak: govt

Vietnam reports second bird flu death in 2014

Chinese scientists sound warning over new bird flu

China reports three new H7N9 bird flu deaths

FARM NEWS
Execution with no farewell spotlights China death penalty

Top China filmmaker pays $1.2 million fine over children

The agony and ecstasy of Hong Kong's extreme runners

Chinese girl's 'cruel' New Year gala dance sparks controversy

FARM NEWS
French navy arrests pirates suspected of oil tanker attack

Mexican vigilantes accuse army of killing four

Gunmen kill two soldiers in troubled Mexican state

China smugglers dig tunnel into Hong Kong: media

FARM NEWS
Japan faced with gloomy data ahead of tax hike

Google becomes number two in market value

World's richest man would still pick up a $100 bill

China manufacturing index at six-month low: HSBC




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement