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South Africa: Super-Tobacco Sees Red at Land Mines


Business Day (Johannesburg)
 

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Business Day (Johannesburg)

22 July 2008
Posted to the web 22 July 2008

Tamar Kahn
Cape Town

Scientists from the University of Stellenbosch have teamed up with Danish biotechnology firm Aresa to test a genetically engineered tobacco plant that turns red when it grows near land mines, offering hope of a cheap way to help clear fields in post-conflict zones.

More than 80 countries are affected by land mines. Angola, Afghanistan, Burundi, Bosnia- Herzegovina, Cambodia, Chechnya, Colombia, Iraq, Nepal and Sri Lanka are worst affected.

Land mines are cleared by explosives experts who put a stick in the ground to locate them, or they use remote devices or sniffer dogs, which are all costly and dangerous processes that typically involve a random check of just a fraction of the area . If the genetically engineered tobacco plants prove successful, they would offer a simple way to assess an entire field.

Aresa has already developed its "RedDetect" technology in a weed called Thales cress, which turns from green to autumnal red when it detects nitrogen dioxide leaching from mines buried in the soil.

However, scientists realised the Thales cress would not be practical because it was too small to be spotted easily from a distance, said Stellenbosch researcher Estelle Kempen.

Aresa has now turned its sights on tobacco, which grows easily in most parts of the world.

Field trials are already under way in Serbia, and researchers from Stellenbosch have applied to the registrar of the Genetically Modified Organisms Act for permission to conduct similar research.

Scientists want to assess how the genetically engineered tobacco responds to drought and extreme temperatures, Kempen said.

The trials, if approved, would be conducted at the Welgevallen experimental farm on the outskirts of Stellenbosch. The plants would be analysed and destroyed before they began flowering to minimise the risk of environmental contamination, she said.

The plant would be used solely for humanitarian purposes, and there were no plans to seek a commercial permit.

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Tobacco plants usually only produce red plant pigments in their flowers, which arises from a natural compound called anthocyanin, which is found in fruit such as apples and tomatoes. The technology developed by Aresa activates anthocyanin in the tobacco plant's leaves if there is soil contamination from explosives such as land mines.


Read comments. Write your own.
Author: Think about it

And then who are you intending to sell the tobbacco to? I am not sure if it is better to die instantly from a landmine or slowly from cancer.

Author: leon

This is how misinformed people are... GM crops have never been proven to cause cancer or any other illness for that matter, (that is, if you are listening to scientists instead of "green" lobby groups). Do you think that country regulators will allow the commercial cultivation of a "cancer" causing crop. Open your mind. Learn at least the basis of the technology.

I'm not the biggest fan of multi-national companies "milking" farmers for profits. But the second phase of the biotech revolution is slowly unfolding. GM crops are now being developed by public institutions, multinationals are giving patent to... [Read Full Text]


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