GM Crops, Organic Agriculture and Breeding for Sustainability
Views
0% 0
Downloads
0 0%

Open access
Loading...
View/Open
Date
2014-03-27
Date Issued
ISI Journal
Impact factor: 2.075 (Year: 2014)
Authors
Citation
Salvatore Ceccarelli. (27/3/2014). GM Crops, Organic Agriculture and Breeding for Sustainability. Sustainability, 6 (7), pp. 4273-4286.
Abstract
The ongoing debate about the use of genetically-modified (GM) crops in
agriculture has largely focused on food safety and genetic contamination issues. Given that
the majority of GM crops have been produced to respond to the problem of crop yield
reductions caused by diseases, insects and weeds, the paper argues that in those cases, the
currently used GM crops are an unstable solution to the problem, because they represent
such a strong selection pressure, that pests rapidly evolve resistance. Organic agriculture
practices provide a more sustainable way of producing healthy food; however, the lower
yields often associated with those practices, making the resultant healthy food more
expensive, open the criticism that such practices will not be able to feed human
populations. Evolutionary plant breeding offers the possibility of using the evolutionary
potential of crops to our advantage by producing a continuous flow of varieties better
adapted to organic systems, to climate change and to the ever changing spectrum of pests,
without depending on chemical control.