Thursday, July 31, 2008
A Comparison of Soil Microbial Community Structure, Protozoa and Nematodes in Field Plots of Conventional and Genetically Modified Maize Expressing the Bacillus thuringiens is CryIAb Toxin
Abstract  Field trials were established at three European sites (Denmark, Eastern France, South-West France) of genetically modified         maize (Zea mays L.) expressing the CryIAb Bacillus thuringiensis toxin (Bt), the near-isogenic non-Bt cultivar, another conventional maize cultivar and grass. Soil from Denmark was sampled         at sowing (May) and harvest (October) over two years (2002, 2003); from E France at harvest 2002, sowing and harvest 2003;         and from SW France at sowing and harvest 2003. Samples were analysed for microbial community structure (2003 samples only)         by community-level physiological-profiling (CLPP) and phospholipid fatty acid analysis (PLFA), and protozoa and nematodes         in all samples. Individual differences within a site resulted from: greater nematode numbers under grass than maize on three         occasions; different nematode populations under the conventional maize cultivars once; and two occasions when there was a         reduced protozoan population under Bt maize compared to non-Bt maize. Microbial community structure within the sites only         varied with grass compared to maize, with one occurrence of CLPP varying between maize cultivars (Bt versus a conventional         cultivar). An overall comparison of Bt versus non-Bt maize across all three sites only revealed differences for nematodes,         with a smaller population under the Bt maize. Nematode community structure was different at each site and the Bt effect was         not confined to specific nematode taxa. The effect of the Bt maize was small and within the normal variation expected in these         agricultural systems.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment