Home  
Shop Subscribe Contact us About us
---- News Categories -----        

LATEST NEWS
Chemicals
Children's health
Climate change
Diet
Energy sources

Fertility
Food Industry
GM crops
Illnesses
Lifestyle

Transport
Vaccination
Women's health
Workplace health
TOP TWENTY
Subscribe/Renew

GM CROPS
Animals give GM the
thumbs down


GM trees absorb then
breathe out mercury

Human bugs mutated by GM

GM cotton and
super-gonorrhoea

GM bug may spread anthrax

US ignores its own scientists

War on drugs escalates
with GM fungus


Super-salmon dangers

GM food - briefing

GM policing fails

Field trials of unpredictable
GM virus


Contaminated honey ...
and bees


Insects breeding resistance

West exploits lack of GM
regulation overseas


Naked DNA poses threat

Terminator 5?

 
Insects breeding resistance
Insects which have developed a resistance to pesticides produced by GM plants tend to mate with each other rather than with non-resistant ones, thus firmly establishing a resistant strain in the environment.

It may not be a permanent problem. The tendency was found in moths which had become pesticide-resistant. Their larvae take five days longer to hatch, thus missing the boat as regards non-resistant faster-hatching potential partners.

(5849) Greenfiles