Crop Biotechnology: Feeds for Beef Cattle

Bruce R. Thomas, Kent J. Bradford                             19 April 2001
Seed Biotechnology Center, Univ. California, Davis
(http://sbc.ucdavis.edu) (email: sbc@ucdavis.edu) (Tel: 530-754-7333)

Distributed at Sierra Foothill REC Beef & Range Field Day, 19 April 2001.
Via internet at http://sbc.ucdavis.edu/outreach/lecture/cattle_feeds.htm

Current & Future Biotech Feed Crops

Current Biotech Feed Crops.  The biotech crop plants approved by USDA APHIS for commercial production in the US include canola, corn, cotton and soybeans enhanced with traits such as herbicide compatibility and protection against insects (1).  Herbicide tolerance in biotech crops provides better weed control and improves soil conservation.  Bt genes help to control insects in biotech crops.  Mycotoxin contents may be reduced in biotech plants with Bt genes due to reduced insect feeding and fewer damaged sites at which fungal infection of the crop plant can occur.  Enhancing seed with pest protection traits reduces the need for pesticide chemicals in crop production, and often enables the grower to choose pesticides that are less harmful to the environment.  Recent economic studies in the US and Canada document benefits of biotech crops including yield increases, cost savings to growers and reductions in chemical applications (2).  These benefits have led to rapid adoption of biotech crops on over 100 million acres worldwide.  Biotech crops will be planted on a large percentage of US acreage in 2001: corn (24%), cotton (64%), and soybeans (63%)  (3).

Feeding trials.  Feeding trials have demonstrated the safety and effectiveness of feeds derived from biotech crop plants.  Bt and nonBt corn hybrids had similar feeding value in beef steers (14). Biotech feeds are digested normally, so there is no effect on safety of meat, milk or eggs produced by the livestock according to the Federation of Animal Science Societies (4).

 Future Biotech Feed Crops.  New biotechnology crop traits under development will provide additional benefits to livestock producers in the future.  Potential future traits in biotech crops include more "output traits" that will enhance food and feed qualities.  Biotech crop traits that may reach the marketplace within the next 5 years include corn with improved oil quality and improved protein quality.  Alfalfa crop traits under development include enhanced protein quality and altered lignin for improved digestibility.  The content of antinutritional substances such as phytate will be reduced in corn and soybean.  Vaccines delivered via biotech feeds may help to maintain the health of livestock and reduce the need for antibiotics in feeds and for vaccine injections.  Biotech feeds containing antifungal peptides may reduce fungi and mycotoxins in feeds, thus improving feed quality, animal health and beef quality. (5)

Production of Biotech Feed Crops

 Methods of plant breeding and biotechnology.  Genetic modification of plants and animals has been practiced for approximately 10,000 years.  By selecting the best plants and animals to serve as the parents for the next generation, our ancestors gradually modified wild plants and animals to create our familiar domesticated crops and livestock.  Over the last century, new methods of plant breeding have been introduced, including wide crosses, F1 hybridization, mutagenesis, and induction of polyploidy.  Biotechnology methods developed in the last few decades include tissue culture, embryo culture, anther culture, somaclonal variation, micropropagation, protoplast fusion, marker-assisted breeding, and transgenic plants (6). Among these methods only transgenic plants developed via recombinant DNA techniques are generally considered to be "genetically modified" or "GMO" according to current use of the terms.

Crop Production - Pollen Drift.   Pollen drift from biotech corn crops has been in the news recently, with concern about effects on monarch butterflies and mixing of StarLink feed corn into the human food supply. Pollen from corn enhanced for insect protection is not endangering the monarch butterflies. Preliminary laboratory studies suggested that Bt genes and Cry protein expression in corn pollen might harm monarch butterflies. Recently more thorough field studies have demonstrated that biotech corn causes little or no harm to monarchs, especially compared to the spray treatment alternatives. One corn variety with high expression of Cry protein in pollen has been withdrawn from production. Corn varieties currently being grown have only minimal expression of Cry protein in their pollen. Monarch populations have not declined in areas where biotech corn is being grown. The greatest risk to monarchs may be habitat loss, particularly in their overwintering sites (7).

          StarLink Corn. StarLink corn contained a Cry9 protein (Bt gene) that was somewhat resistant to digestion in monogastric animals and therefore might act as an allergen in some people. StarLink corn is approved for animal feed and industrial applications.  During planting and harvesting in 1999 and 2000 StarLink was not kept separate as intended, with some pollen drift into neighboring fields and some postharvest mixing in storage and transport. Thus, StarLink corn became mixed with corn intended for human food.  Some reports of people with possible allergic reactions to StarLink are currently under investigation, but have not been confirmed.  Registration for planting of StarLink has been withdrawn and planting seed for the 2001 corn crop is being carefully tested to ensure that no more StarLink is planted (11).

Identity Preservation.  Many customers are now setting stringent requirements in their purchase of biotech vs. conventional planting seeds and harvested products.  Identity preservation is a system of detailed record keeping designed to document that distinct crop varieties have been kept separate from planting through harvest and on to the end user (15). As crops with enhanced nutritional properties become available, identity preservation will be essential to ensure that the added value purchased is actually delivered in the feeds.

Government Regulation & Consumer Opinions

 US Government Regulation of Biotech Crops.  The use of crops produced via biotechnology is regulated by three US government agencies (8).  The USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) regulates field-testing of biotechnology-derived plant varieties. The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is the lead agency for evaluating crop plants with pesticidal traits developed via biotechnology. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is the primary agency regulating the safety of foods developed via biotechnology. New regulations for organic agriculture certification exclude the use of biotech crop plants or their feeding to organic livestock (9). An additional consumer choice is provided by recent FDA regulations for voluntary labeling of foods produced without biotech ingredients (10).

 International Government Regulation of Biotech Crops.  Export markets for biotech crops are complicated by wide variability in international government regulations and consumer reactions to biotechnology. Many governments are still establishing mechanisms to regulate biotech crops and food products.  The European Union Parliament recently repealed their moratorium on approval of new biotech food crops (12), but governments in individual countries also need to act before these markets will open up to new biotech crops.

 Public Debate about Biotech Foods.  There is now a worldwide debate about the use of biotech crops and livestock.  Opponents of agricultural biotechnology raise issues such as: food safety, food labeling, environmental contamination, reduction in biodiversity and concern about possible unknown consequences.  Some of the protest against biotechnology is motivated by broader issues in society such as concerns about corporate monopolization of food, globalization of the economy and reduction of imports to protect local farm economies.   New regulations proposed by USDA and FDA have tightened the scrutiny of biotechnology foods before they are allowed into the marketplace and enabled alternative choices for consumers who wish to avoid food products produced from transgenic crop plants.  Scientific, social, economic and ethical issues are all involved in determining consumer acceptance of agricultural biotechnology.

Consumer surveys.  Two recent public surveys in the US demonstrated that a majority support continued research and expect biotechnology to provide benefits (13).  When asked about food safety issues, very few people indicated any concerns about biotechnology in foods.  Many people are uninformed about how biotechnology contributes to food production, so there is a challenge to provide information about this to the public.  In the US consumers are generally optimistic about biotechnology and believe that government regulations are working to protect public safety.  Careful stewardship of the technology at all steps in the production and marketing chain is critical in order to retain the trust of the public.

 References

1. USDA APHIS - New List of De-Regulated Crops
   http://www.aphis.usda.gov/biotech/not_reg.html
2. Agricultural Biotechnology Briefing Room, ERS/USDA 07march2001
   http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/Biotechnology/
   Agronomic & Economic Assessment of Transgenic Canola, Canola Council of Canada jan2001
   http://www.canola-council.org/manual/GMO/gmo_main.htm
3. ISAAA Brief No. 21 - 2000 : Global Status of Commercialized Transgenic Crops
   http://www.isaaa.org/publications/briefs/Brief_21.htm
   Crop Production--Prospective Plantings, USDA 30march2001
   http://usda.mannlib.cornell.edu/reports/nassr/field/pcp-bbp/
4. Feeding Transgenic Crops to Livestock
   http://sbc.ucdavis.edu/outreach/resource/gm_food_safety.htm#Feed References
   Crop Biotechnology: Feeds for the Dairy Industry, March 21, 2001
   http://sbc.ucdavis.edu/outreach/lecture/DairyDayAbstract.htm
   Federation of Animal Science Societies, Jan 2000 GM Crops - NO Impact on Milk, Meat, Eggs
   http://www.fass.org/fassfact.pdf
5. USDA APHIS - Current Status of Notifications
   http://www.aphis.usda.gov/bbep/bp/notday.html
   USDA APHIS - Current Status of Petitions
   http://www.aphis.usda.gov/biotech/petday.html
6. Plant Biotechnology Tutorials - Resource Series
   http://sbc.ucdavis.edu/outreach/resource/tutorial_biotech.htm
7. EPA Report Finds Biotech Crops Have Little Impact on Monarch Butterflies, 22sept2000
   http://www.plant.uoguelph.ca/safefood/gmo/epa-biotech-crops.htm
8. USDA - Agricultural Biotechnology   http://www.aphis.usda.gov/bbep/bp/
   EPA - Biopesticides   http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/biopesticides/
   FDA - Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition   http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/
9. National Organic Standards - Final Rule
   http://www.ams.usda.gov/nop/nop2000/nop/finalrulepages/finalrulemap.htm
10. FDA - voluntary labeling of foods produced without transgenic ingredients
   http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/biolabgu.html
11. StarLink situation, Iowa St Univ 04jan2001
   http://www.exnet.iastate.edu/Pages/grain/publications/buspub/0010star.PDF
   StarLink Corn, Aventis
   http://www.us.cropscience.aventis.com/AventisUS/CropScience/stage/html/starlinkcorn.htm
12. Repeal of moratorium on GMO release into the environment, European Parliament 29jan2001
   http://www2.europarl.eu.int/omk/OM-Europarl?PROG=REPORT&L=EN&PUBREF=-//EP//TEXT
            +REPORT+A5-2001-0032+0+NOT+SGML+V0//EN
13. IFIC - More US Consumers See Benefits to Food Biotechnology Feb 13, 2001
   http://ific.org/ (What's New at IFIC)
   Public Sentiments About Genetically Modified Foods, Pew Initiative march2001
   http://pewagbiotech.org/research/
14. Utilization of Bt corn hybrids in growing beef steers, 2001 Nebraska Beef Report
   http://www.ianr.unl.edu/pubs/beef/mp76.pdf (pg 39-41)
15. Identity Preservation - Resource Series
   http://sbc.ucdavis.edu/outreach/resource/IDpreserve_biotech.htm


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Dr. Kent J. Bradford
Director
Dr. Bruce R. Thomas
Technical Director
Susan Webster
Program Representative

Seed Biotechnology Center
University of California, One Shields Avenue, Davis CA 95616
Tel: 530-754-7333 . . . Fax: 530-754-7222
http://sbc.ucdavis.edu . . . email: sbc@ucdavis.edu