"Discuss the social, economic and cultural considerations surrounding the use of GM plants, with reference to this tomato plant [provided in a stimulus] and another example of a GM plant" (7)
BT cotton
- made in the 1990s
- GM cotton that contains DNA for a protein that is poisonous to a specific cotton-eating caterpillar
- required to be produced because the caterpillar had developed resistance to regular insecticides and was being a nasty pest
- gene used is from Bacillus Thuringiensis bacteria (now say it out loud)
- decrease in genetic diversity of the cotton plant --> GM plants are clones of each other for ease of production and therefore have no variation
edits;
- recombinant plasmid vector used to transfer BT gene into cotton
- as the cotton "germinates" it produces the gene and thus acquires the resistance
- decreased variation and genetic diversity allows increases the risk of a single disease wiping out an entire population, as there is no room for healthy mutations and resistances to generate and occur
- social considerations: allows for greater cotton products to be made and therefore benefits humanity OR general public is scared of GM
- economic: due to greater production by farmers, they can earn more + creates more jobs in the economy for retailers to sell cotton
- ethical: monocultures - not good for other plants who dont have resistance (they are outcompeted and die rip) OR general public is scared of GM and how it could be unethical to feed the developing countries a possibly 'harmful' genetically engineered product tbh