I have been following some interesting threads of discussion
on the internet over the past few days, after receiving a number of invitations
to sign a petition against the American chemical company Monsanto, probably
best known as the inventor of Round Up. The petitioners allege that Monsanto has gained
patent rights on all vegetable varieties and will enforce a ban on gardeners and
farmers saving their own seeds.
It has certainly vexed some people and there are some
outraged people, posting all sorts of strange stories on-line. Needless to say
the story is more interesting, and less alarming than that. Monsanto has bought a number of seed
companies over the past few years, including Seminis, a large supplier of
commercial strains of vegetable seeds. Monsanto
does not have a monopoly on seeds, and only has any patent rights on vegetable
seeds that were patented through Seminis.
So what are plant patents and how do they affect gardeners?
All of our vegetable varieties have been derived from wild
species, usually by many generations of gardeners saving seeds from varieties
which are an improvement over the wild kinds.
In that way beans and peas were cultivated for their sweetness and the
increased size of the seeds, while carrots were changed from pale-rooted
vegetables into the (usually) orange vegetable we are familiar with. Perhaps the most remarkable series of changes
has taken place within the Brassica group of vegetables, where one species has
been, through patient selection, turned into kale, cauliflower, cabbage, Brussels
Sprouts, broccoli and collards.
That process of careful selection meant that a century ago
seed companies were able to offer their own strains of most vegetable types,
and employed breeders and manual labour to ensure their varieties were true to
type, and to also instigate new varieties.
This would be achieved by hand crossing two differing varieties, each
with a particular point the breeder was interested in - early cropping, better colour, larger size for
example – then the resultant seedlings would then be reselected until the best
traits were combined in a stable strain. This was usually achieved by growing the vegetables
in large numbers, keeping only the very best for seed and ruthlessly rouging out
any plants that were not true to type. Then, and only then, would the strain be
released onto the market. This type of
seed is pollinated by insects and is referred to as Open Pollinated, or OP.
But once it was released, any seed was fair game, and could
quickly be bulked up and grown and sold by any competitor, thus denying the
original breeder of the full fruits of their labour in developing the variety
in the first place.
That all changed with the introduction of the Plant Variety
Protection legislation in the United States, and later in other places, especially
when that was extended to seed strains as well as cloned cultivars.
In a local sense, this idea of being able to patent a plant
variety came too late for Robinson’s Nurseries who bred the phenomenally
popular Photinia ‘Red Robin’ in the
1940s. Nowadays they would be able to
license such a variety and would be able to secure a payment for every plant sold
around the world, worth hundreds of thousands of dollars each year. Then they only had the introducer’s bonus, of
being able to bulk to a sufficient number of plants before they were released onto
the market.
In recent years plant breeders have concentrated on
producing F1 hybrids, with interesting results for gardeners. These are strains where two different parent
strains are kept going, and crossed with each other, thus producing hybrid vigour,
and much better uniformity. This is a similar
technique to that used by farmers for generations where they cross Romney ewers
with Southdown rams to produce vigorous lambs.
The seed company only sell the seeds resulting from the
first generation of crosses, thus the home gardener cannot replicate the
strains, and is forced to buy seed fresh each year. This is worthwhile for some varieties, but of
less value for others, as F1 seed is usually exponentially dearer than OP
seed. I would never grow OP broccoli as
F1 plants are much better, and the same applies to cauliflower, tomatoes and peppers. On the other hand, OP lettuce and cabbage are
generally fine – in fact, F1 hybrid cabbages tend to be too big for the home gardeners
and older varieties, such as ‘Derby Day’; are probably a better bet.
Monsanto, and other chemical-producing firms have taken
plant breeding a step further – a step too far many people - by using human genetic
modification to breed plants with specific traits not found in nature, especially
so in the case of Monsanto, which has released a Round Up resistant variety of
soybean to the market, and has quickly captured the majority of the seed market. They have also bred strains of maize and
other crops that are also Round Up resistant. They are remarkably popular as they allow farmers
to sow seeds much closer as they can use Round Up as a post-emergence spray
thus obviating the need for mechanical tillage between rows.
There is an inherent risk in this, of course, that being the
possibility of the gene for Round Up resistance passing to a weed, this removing
Round Up’s efficacy. So far that does
not seem to have happened.
The other area of concern for some is the issue of ‘terminator
seeds’, varieties where the seed produced is sterile and cannot be used for a second
generation. This is obviously an issue
for poorer farmers in less developed countries, and although it is claimed that
such seed is produced, in fact it has not been commercially produced by any
company.
So, in short, Monsanto is not going to try and patent all
vegetable varieties, and does could not if it wanted to, so you will still be
able to grow ‘Great Lakes’ and ‘Webbs Wonderful’ lettuce, ‘Moneymaker’ tomatoes and ‘Nante’ carrots
without adding to the riches of the shareholders of Monsanto.
4 comments:
I don't claim to be the world's expert on these issues, but I think there's a lot more to this Monsanto thing than you're covering here.
The movie 'Food Inc.' covers some more issues than you've covered here. I don't believe the seeds are terminators, but the second generation is problematic from what I've heard.
Another concern about Monsanto plants/seeds are the affect of the pesticides on soils and nearby non-monsanto crops. Also the effect of these pesticides on insects (particularly bees - but longer term affect on humans are also unknown). The EPA/FDA only require first generation testing be carried out, and testing is done not by these regulatory bodies, but the companies themselves hoping to have their product passed.
You might find this interesting too: http://topdocumentaryfilms.com/the-world-according-to-monsanto/
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