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Biosafety in Populus spp. and other forest trees: from non-native species to taxa derived from traditional breeding and genetic engineering
Trees 20 (2), 131 (2006)
Posted by scsi to GMOS on Tue Apr 01 2008 at 16:01 UTC | info | related
 
Pollen dispersal from exotic eucalypt plantations
Conservation Genetics 6 (2), 253 (2005)
 
Ecological and population genetics research imperatives for transgenic trees
Tree Genetics & Genomes 3 (2), 119 (2007)
Posted by scsi to GMOS on Tue Apr 01 2008 at 14:19 UTC | info | related
 
Landscape gene flow, coexistence and threshold effect: The case of genetically modified herbicide tolerant oilseed rape (Brassica napus)
Ecological Modelling 205 (1-2), 169 (2007)
Posted by scsi to Landscape GMOS on Tue Apr 01 2008 at 14:15 UTC | info | related
 
Implications of natural propagule flow for containment of genetically modified forest trees
Tree Genetics & Genomes 3 (2), 141 (2007)
Posted by scsi to GMOS dispersal on Tue Apr 01 2008 at 14:12 UTC | info | related
 
Estimating isolation distances for genetically modified trees in plantation forestry
Ecological Modelling 179 (3), 247 (2004)
Posted by scsi to plantation forestry GMOS on Tue Apr 01 2008 at 14:06 UTC | info | related
 
THE EFFECT OF WIND DIRECTION ON CROSS-POLLINATION IN WIND-POLLINATED GM CROPS
Ecological Applications 17 (4), 1234 (2007)
In Europe, regulatory thresholds restrict adventitious GM (genetically modified) presence in conventional crops. Minimum distances for the spatial separation of fields are often recommended to reduce field-to-field cross-pollination to an acceptable level. Field trials are typically the basis for setting separation distances. However, using records of wind direction and speed from weather stations across Europe, we predict theoretically that field-to-field windborne cross-pollination in maize, oilseed rape, sugar beet, and rice varies greatly according to the relative orientation of the GM and non-GM fields. Furthermore, at a given site and orientation from a GM field, we predict that the cross-pollination rate varies substantially from year to year. Consequently, even replicated field trials may inaccurately estimate typical levels of cross-pollination and therefore distort our perception of the separation distances required to achieve sub-threshold adventitious GM presence. We propose methods to predict the likely range in levels of cross-pollination based on the limited data typically available from field trials. Additionally, we suggest suitable time lags between peak flowering in adjacent fields that could be introduced to reduce cross-pollination to a specified level.
Posted by scsi to GMOS pollination Pollen on Thu Mar 27 2008 at 14:22 UTC | info | related
 
Rate of transgene spread via long-distance seed dispersal in Pinus taeda
Rate of transgene spread via longdistance seed dispersal in
Forest Ecology and Management 217 (1), 95 (2005)
Posted by scsi to gene flow GMOS modelling on Thu Mar 27 2008 at 13:48 UTC | info | related
 
High diversity of oilseed rape pollen clouds over an agro-ecosystem indicates long-distance dispersal
C Devaux et al.
Molecular Ecology 14 (8), 2269-80
Posted by scsi to GMOS dispersal Pollen on Thu Mar 27 2008 at 13:17 UTC | info | related
 
The limited value of measuring gene flow via errant pollen from GM plants
Alan McHughen
Environmental Biosafety Research 5, 1-2 (19 Sep 2006)
Posted by scsi to GMOS Pollen on Thu Mar 27 2008 at 12:48 UTC | info | related

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