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Data from: Transgenes for insect resistance reduce herbivory and enhance fecundity in advanced generations of crop-weed hybrids of rice

Creators: Yang, Xiao, Xia, Hui, Wang, Wei, Wang, Feng, Su, Jun, Snow, Allison A, Lu, Bao-Rong
Year: 2011
DOI: 10.5061/dryad.8974
License: CC0 (Public Domain)
Location: Gunnison Basin, Colorado
Publisher: Dryad
Tags: red rice, Oryza sativa f. spontanea, Risk assessment, Biotechnology, genetically engineered, weediness, Biosafety, Plant Biology, Insect Ecology, Genetics & Evolution, Invasive Species & Disturbance, Gunnison Basin

Description

Gene flow from transgenic crops allows novel traits to spread to sexually compatible weeds. Traits such as resistance to insects may enhance the fitness of weeds, but few studies have tested for these effects under natural field conditions. We created F2 and F3 crop-weed hybrid lineages of genetically engineered rice (Oryza sativa) using lines with two transgene constructs, cowpea trypsin inhibitor (CpTI) and a Bt transgene linked to CpTI (Bt/CpTI). Experiments conducted in Fuzhou, China, demonstrated that CpTI alone did not significantly affect fecundity, although it reduced herbivory. In contrast, under certain conditions Bt/CpTI conferred up to 79% less insect damage and 47% greater fecundity relative to non-transgenic controls, and a 44% increase in fecundity relative to the weedy parent. A small fitness cost was detected in F3 progeny with Bt/CpTI when grown under low insect pressure and direct competition with transgene-negative controls. We conclude that Bt/CpTI transgenes may introgress into co-occurring weedy rice populations and contribute to greater seed production when target insects are abundant. However, the net fitness benefits that are associated with Bt/CpTI could be ephemeral if insect pressure is lacking, for example, due to widespread planting of Bt cultivars that suppress target insect populations.

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