Testing
the Waters for Growth-Enhanced Salmon
June 7, 2004
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and
World Science Staff
One of environmentalists' greatest fears about genetically modified organisms
is that if they escape into the wild, they might run rampant.
But
a study designed to address this subject using genetically engineered salmon
suggested this wouldn't be a problem. When mixed with their wild-type cohorts,
the modified salmon tried aggressively to compete, but failed.
The
study found that at least in a laboratory setting, modified and wild-type
salmon do not compete with each other unless there is a food shortage.
A key
factor in determining how disruptive an animal is to an ecosystem is its
ability to compete for food. A transgenic animal of particular concern, called
growth hormone (GH) salmon, is engineered to grow up to seven times larger
than wild-type salmon. However, it is unknown whether GH salmon simply grow
large whenever food is plentiful, or whether an enhanced appetite causes them
to actively compete for food.
To
examine the competitive abilities of GH salmon, Robert Devlin and colleagues
of Fisheries and Oceans Canada put engineered and wild-type salmon together,
supplying either low or abundant levels of food. In the presence of sufficient
food, the modified animals did not competitively interfere with the wild-type
ones.
When
food was low, dominant fish, which were usually he engineered type, competed
aggressively for food and sometimes cannibalized their cohorts. Ultimately,
however, with little food the transgenic salmon populations crashed, often
resulting in complete extinction. Meanwhile, nontransgenic salmon populations
survived and multiply. These results show food availability and population
structure strongly influence how transgenic salmon will impact an ecosystem,
the researchers said.
The
authors caution that effects observed in laboratory studies have uncertain
applicability to complex natural ecosystems. The study is published in the
June 7 early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, a research journal.