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Estimating the effects of Cry1F Bt-maize pollen on non-target Lepidoptera using a mathematical model of exposure

Authors :
Perry, Joe N.
Devos, Yann
Arpaia, Salvatore
Bartsch, Detlef
Ehlert, Christina
Gathmann, Achim
Hails, Rosemary S.
Hendriksen, Niels B.
Kiss, Jozsef
Messéan, Antoine
Mestdagh, Sylvie
Neemann, Gerd
Nuti, Marco
Sweet, Jeremy B.
Tebbe, Christoph C.
Perry, Joe N.
Devos, Yann
Arpaia, Salvatore
Bartsch, Detlef
Ehlert, Christina
Gathmann, Achim
Hails, Rosemary S.
Hendriksen, Niels B.
Kiss, Jozsef
Messéan, Antoine
Mestdagh, Sylvie
Neemann, Gerd
Nuti, Marco
Sweet, Jeremy B.
Tebbe, Christoph C.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

1. In farmland biodiversity, a potential risk to the larvae of non-target Lepidoptera from genetically modified (GM) Bt-maize expressing insecticidal Cry1 proteins is the ingestion of harmful amounts of pollen deposited on their host plants. A previous mathematical model of exposure quantified this risk for Cry1Ab protein. We extend this model to quantify the risk for sensitive species exposed to pollen containing Cry1F protein from maize event 1507 and to provide recommendations for management to mitigate this risk. 2. A 14-parameter mathematical model integrating small- and large-scale exposure was used to estimate the larval mortality of hypothetical species with a range of sensitivities, and under a range of simulated mitigation measures consisting of non-Bt maize strips of different widths placed around the field edge. 3. The greatest source of variability in estimated mortality was species sensitivity. Before allowance for effects of large-scale exposure, with moderate within-crop host-plant density and with no mitigation, estimated mortality locally was <10% for species of average sensitivity. For the worst-case extreme sensitivity considered, estimated mortality locally was 99·6% with no mitigation, although this estimate was reduced to below 40% with mitigation of 24-m-wide strips of non-Bt maize. For highly sensitive species, a 12-m-wide strip reduced estimated local mortality under 1·5%, when within-crop host-plant density was zero. Allowance for large-scale exposure effects would reduce these estimates of local mortality by a highly variable amount, but typically of the order of 50-fold. 4. Mitigation efficacy depended critically on assumed within-crop host-plant density; if this could be assumed negligible, then the estimated effect of mitigation would reduce local mortality below 1% even for very highly sensitive species. 5. Synthesis and applications. Mitigation measures of risks of Bt-maize to sensitive larvae of non-target lepidopteran species can b

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363189404
Document Type :
Electronic Resource