AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the risk to protected butterfly species in Central Europe from the extensive cultivation of transgenic maize, specifically insect resistant (IR) and herbicide resistant (HR) varieties.
  • The toxic pollen from IR maize can harm butterfly larvae if they coincide with maize flowering, affecting at least 31 butterfly species during their larval stage.
  • HR maize usage can diminish important weed species that serve as food plants for butterflies, potentially leading to population declines in 140 protected species that rely on these weeds.

Article Abstract

We evaluated whether protected European butterflies can potentially be at risk if transgenic maize is extensively grown in Central Europe. We explored potential consequences of both insect resistant (IR) and herbicide resistant (HR) transgenic maize. IR maize can produce pollen that is toxic to lepidopteran larvae, and this puts butterfly species at possible risk if the presence of young larvae coincides with maize flowering, during which large quantities of maize pollen can be deposited on vegetation. By considering the timing of maize flowering in Europe and the phenology of the protected Lepidoptera species, we found that 31 species had at least one generation where 50% of the larval stage overlapped with maize flowering, and 69 species for which first instar larvae were present during maize pollen shedding. HR maize allows high concentration herbicide treatments on fields without seasonal limitation, which can drastically reduce weed densities. In cases where such weed species are host plants for protected butterflies, reduced host plant/food availability can result, causing population decreases. By using published information, we first identified the important weed species in major maize-growing European countries. Subsequently, we checked whether the host plants of protected Lepidoptera included species that are common maize weeds. We identified 140 protected species having food plants that are common weeds in one or more of the major European maize-growing countries. If HR maize is grown in Europe, there is a potential hazard that their food plants will seriously decline, causing a subsequent decline of these protected species.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1744-7917.12849DOI Listing

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