GE onion Partner Blamed for Contaminating Tomatoes
Tuesday, 23 December 2003, 8:34 am
Press Release: GE Free NZ
Seminis- GE onion Partner- Blamed for Contaminating
Tomatoes
The Company backing the new GE onion trial in
New Zealand -Seminis- has been identified as the source of
GE-contaminated tomato seeds that has just been revealed in
the US.
A report from the University of California
says Seminis supplied contaminated seed to a number of
institutions over the last seven years.
The report
says that seeds thought to be GM-free were contaminated and
sold on. To what degree these mislabeled seeds were further
amplified and may have contaminated commercial varieties in
the U.S. or in other countries remains unknown.
"The
involvement of this company in New Zealand further
undermines public confidence that regulators know what they
are doing in approving their experiments here," says Jon
Carapiet from GE Free NZ in food and environment.
ERMA
has already been asked to reassess the decision because of
new evidence from the US that these particular GE crops
increase use of sprays rather than reduce sprays.
ERMA
should now also reconsider the financial viability of
Seminis, and their suitability as a partner. The risks to
New Zealand if the company goes bankrupt has recently shown
with the PPL GE sheep costing thousands to be destroyed,
despite the potential research- value of samples from the
animals.
ENDS
Jon Carapiet 09 815
3370
from the University of California at Davis site
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Tomato
Seed from Seed Bank Found to be Genetically
Modified
December 18, 2003 -- The University of
California, Davis, is recalling about 30 tomato seed
samples, distributed during the past seven years to research
colleagues in the United States and abroad, after recent
tests showed that the seed was not the intended variety, but
rather a very similar variety developed through
biotechnology.
The seed contains a commercially approved
biotech trait, referred to as the PG trait. That trait,
which improves the thickness of tomato paste, had been
approved in 1994 for use in human food. A similar tomato
variety with the PG trait had previously been planted
commercially in California, and tomato paste with the trait
had been sold to consumers, primarily in the United
Kingdom.
The Seed and Its Distribution
Since 1996,
small quantities of seed of the processing-tomato variety
known as UC-82B were provided, upon request, by UC Davis to
researchers at 12 institutions in the United States and to
researchers in 14 other countries. Each sample included
about 25 seeds to be used in research projects at those
institutions. Two samples were also sent abroad for
demonstration gardens in England and Ethiopia. UC Davis and
the recipients were unaware that these particular UC-82B
seeds carried the PG trait.
UC Davis officials have
determined that the seeds carrying the PG trait originated
from a 20-gram seed sample donated to UC Davis in 1996 by
Petoseed Company, which has since been acquired by Seminis
Vegetable Seeds. It is unclear when or where the seeds were
mislabeled.
The seed mix-up came to light when the Charles
M. Rick Tomato Genetics Resource Center at UC Davis sent
samples of what was thought to be unmodified UC-82B to the
UC Davis Plant Transformation Facility. This research
service unit genetically modifies small numbers of plants
for use in campus research projects. In working with the
seeds, staff scientists detected the unexpected presence of
a commonly used "marker" gene, NPT II, and notified the Rick
center. The protein derived from the NPT II gene has been
approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a food
additive. Subsequent testing also revealed the presence of
the PG gene.
A similar tomato variety with the same
combination of PG gene and NPT II was commercialized in 1996
through a collaboration between Petoseed Company and Zeneca
Plant Science. That variety was approved for food and tomato
production in the U.S. by the Food and Drug Administration
in 1994 and the U.S. Department of Agriculture in 1995. It
also was approved for food consumption by the government of
the United Kingdom in 1995 and in Canada by Health Canada in
1996. That variety also passed scientific review in the
European Union. It was grown commercially in California and
sold as tomato paste product in the United Kingdom between
1996 and 1999.
Response by UC Davis and Seminis
Upon
learning of the apparent mix-up, the Rick tomato center
curator reviewed records and found that the UC-82B seed had
been obtained in 1996 from Petoseed. Although that seed
variety had been developed in 1976 by a UC Davis plant
breeder, the campus supply had run low and Petoseed had
replenished it.
"We immediately tested our seed and
informed both Seminis and the U.S. Department of
Agriculture," said Neal Van Alfen, dean of UC Davis' College
of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences. "DNA sequencing
conducted at UC Davis has confirmed the presence of the PG
trait.
"We have notified the individuals or research units
that received the seed," Van Alfen added. "We are asking the
recipients to let us know how they used or disposed of the
seed, and to send any seeds remaining from the original
sample to an independent laboratory for DNA testing."
Ed
Green, senior vice president of research and development at
Seminis, said: "We will continue to work closely with the
university to determine how this error occurred. We have
offered the full analytical resources of Seminis and have
made our records available to university officials.
"While
current regulatory controls and technological advances would
make this type of mix-up highly unlikely today, we also feel
it's prudent to review our seed handling, storage and
sharing protocols to look for improvements, " Green
said.
Green added that only a small fraction of Seminis'
current research involves biotechnology because the
company's focus is on traditional plant breeding. Seminis
does not sell any tomatoes developed with biotechnology.
Background on the Rick Center and Seminis
UC Davis'
http://tgrc.ucdavis.edu Charles M. Rick Tomato Genetics
Resource Center is associated with the National Plant
Germplasm System. Upon request, the center provides seed
samples to scientists and educators worldwide. The center
houses seeds of more than 3,600 wild species and
domesticated varieties, and is considered the most diverse
collection of its kind in the
world.
http://www.seminis.com Seminis markets more than
4,000 vegetable and fruit varieties. Its products reduce the
need for chemical pest controls, improve grower yields and
offer improved nutrition, flavour and convenience, according
to Seminis officials.
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