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The Rural Voice, 2001-10, Page 50Research Scrap Book Gene -altering vaccine could change plants Australian scientists say they've developed a vaccine that can alter genes to make them immune to diseases and even change some characteristics of the plant.• The vaccine could increase yields of major crops such as wheat and barley up to 30 per cern by activating plant defence mechanisms to knock out diseases before they take hold — in the same way humans can be vaccinated against the flu. Unlike other forms of genetic modification, the Australian technique does not change the plant by inserting a foreign gene but instead silences an existing gene. "From that point of view it's perhaps more acceptable to consumers," scientist Peter Waterhouse said. "It's very exciting. ,It's enabling technology. You can do all sorts of different things with it." Among those different things are knocking out genes to produce non - browning bananas or caffeine -free coffee while not altering the protein structure, said Waterhouse, a scientist with the Australian government's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization. The technique could also silence unwanted genes that produce allergens in nuts or pollen. The technology which has been proven in barley plants raised in greenhouses and is about to be used in trial crops, involves inserting a small, incomplete piece of virus RNA into plant DNA. DNA makes up genes which transmit hereditary characteristics. RNA helps cells make proteins, and is also the hereditary material in some viruses. Plants recognize the virus RNA as foreign and activate their defence mechanisms, degrading the invader before it multiplies. This results in immunity to the virus, which scientists say can be passed down through plant generations. The method targets the cell's own RNA to silence genes. "We can also target the degradation of any RNA," Waterhouse said. "You can tell the plant, in a way, that you want to knock out (any RNA)... make the plant think that it is a virus." Waterhouse isn't sure when the vaccine will be commercially available. He said it is complicated by cross -patent negotiations with multinational corporations active in the genetic modification business, as well as by consumer reaction. Still, the technology is ready to roll, he said. Waterhouse said the vaccination technology could be worth millions, if not billions of dollars in licence fees and increased productivity. Multinationals would have to buy licences from the Australian organization if they wanted to use the technology, which is in the process of being patented. Hundreds of international laboratories have already requested technical details. Savings to Australia's huge wheat crop, worth $4 billion (Aust.) a year on world markets would be huge.0 — Source: Reuters News Agency Animal welfare depends on farm profits There's a direct link between a farm's prosperity and the welfare of its animals, says the head of University of British Columbia's animal welfare centre. "If profits are too low, then the animals as well as their owners end up living in poverty," said David Fraser at a livestock care conference in Calgary. "There is a clear link between farm profits and animal welfare standards." Fraser said the decision to raise cattle in enclosed areas is made strictly for economic reasons. Chicken cages and gestation crates are used to increase production and earn more money. Supply management which guarantees farmers reasonable profits, gives farmers greater options compared to unregulated competition, he said. Still, Fraser argued for national guidelines for animal care, handling and slaughter. Current provincial regulations mean different standards across the country. 0 46 THE RURAL VOICE L — Source: Western Producer Climate change could boost crop yields in Canada Canadian agricultural produc- tion could double by 2080 because of global warming but it will have to if people in poorer countries, who will be hard hit, are to eat says a study, by the International Insti- tute for Applied Systems Analysis and the Food and Agriculture Org- anization of the United Nations. The study, the first comprehen- sive look at how climate change will affect the world's agricultural systems, predicts many countries, where masses of people already go hungry, will see their ability to grow food plummet. The study, by the institute's senior scientist Mahendra Shah and three others, concludes the world's smallest polluters will suffer the most. The poorest 40 countries will lose roughly a fifth of their ability to grow food. These countries are already short nearly 10 million tonnes of food a year needed to feed their populations. By 2080, once the effects of greenhouse gases currently in the atmosphere are fully felt, they will have a deficit of 60 millions tonnes, Shah said. "T,he future looks bleak," he said. "And these poor developing countries have done little in terms of causing climate change." For Canada — one of the world's biggest greenhouse -gas polluters — the picture looks considerably more rosy. Shah said land currently too cold or too dry to grow food will eventually become arable. However, some scientists have questioned whether the quality of soil above the current agricultural belt in Central Canada will be robust enough to grow food crops, even if water and warmth are present. Other winners from climate change are expected to be Finland, Norway, New Zealand, Russia and China.0 — Source: The Globe and Mail