Saw this yesterday; a bacterium that lives in the gut of bees has been modified to attack varroa: sciencemag.org/news/2020/01/mite-destroying-gut-bacterim-might-help-save-vulernerable-noney-bees?
Human stupidity is indestructible.. To laugh and cry at same time..
We should maintain pollution or increase it, but we will modify guts to endure more.. What a cunning idea..
On the other hand millions of people would have died if penicillin had not been developed to combat infections. Let's not knock this work. Killer bugs to wack varroa mites sound like a good idea.
Wouldn't we have "locally adapted? !!"
On the other hand millions of people would have died if penicillin had not been developed to combat infections. Let's not knock this work. Killer bugs to wack varroa mites sound like a good idea.
Shirley that should be" BEST Cornish natural pure raw artisan honey"...but how am I going to be able to call my product "natural pure raw artisan honey" if it's genetically modified?
CVB
People call their honey Organic without any way of preventing bees from feeding on crops that use non-natural treatments, I don't see how this would be different.
I'd say varroa would be resistant to this almost instantaneously.
The kill was only very partial "The mites were 70% more likely to die on the treated bees than untreated ones"
How many mites die naturally on untreated bees? A minority (say 10%). And treatment only increased this by 70% (that would be 17%, meaning 83% survive in this example).
The surviving mites will go onto raise more resitant offspring.
Makes a nice article and an interesting experiment but I cant see it being of any practical use (and thats not considering the release of genetically altered organisms issue)
Nature has been gene slicing forever... called evolution.
( But then mans interference in producing the carnolian and Italian hybridised bees should be deemed genetically altered organisms?)
I hope you don't keep a Canis lupus familiaris as a pet as it is a genetically modified Canis lupus. (ditto felis catus)
From the little I know gene-splicing is not equivalent to evolution. It is nothing like as complex. A step in evolution might change 100s of genes in combination. I worry we are not that clever and that the road to gaining that knowledge might produce some disastrous consequences.
Maybe gene-splicing is like putting petrol in a diesel car and finding it will now do 200mph. Great, we like speed. But the brakes won't handle it. And the engine lasts a 100 miles before blowing up.
Here's an idea.
Bee has one of it's gut microbes modified so that an effect is spread through it's body killing the parasitic mite.
Bee visits flower, maybe leaves behind gut bacteria in it's saliva on the flower.
Bumble bee visits flower, picks up gut bacteria which it also happens to have in it's gut.
Bumble bee kills off mites that might be beneficial.
Bumble bee population and pollination suffers. Takes 5 years to work this out. (could be any other pollinator)
Modified bacteria keeps multiplying every 20 minutes being passed on to more insects.
How do you remove that modified bacteria from the environment now we've discovered it's a bad idea?
We've made repeated mistakes with chemicals over the years but at least they degrade in the soil. A modified bacteria would multiply.
I don't sleep that well.
How does gut bacteria end up in saliva? A bee's gut is separate from the honey sac and head.
Quite so !
Rest assured...
I did some post grad work in a GM facility, GMing E coli bacteria using plasmoids to increase virus DNA.... the Bio Security was exacting!!
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