Tests reveal no transgenics in UA Division of Agriculture rice seed

Sept. 21, 2006

Contact Information:Dr. Milo Shult, Vice President for Agriculture, U of A System, 501-686-2540
Dr. Chris Deren, Rice Research and Extension Center, Stuttgart, 870-673-2661

By Howell Medders, Communications, University of Arkansas Division of Agriculture
479-575-5647 / hmedders@uark.edu


STUTTGART, Ark. — University of Arkansas System Vice President for Agriculture Milo Shult today said that tests by an independent laboratory found no genetically modified rice in samples of breeder seed or foundation seed grown by the U of A system’s Division of Agriculture over the past three years.

The division is a major supplier of foundation rice seed to seed dealers. Arkansas produces about half of the rice grown in the United States.

Transgenic rice varieties have been developed by seed companies and certified by the U.S. Department of Agriculture as posing no risk to public health or the environment, but they have not been approved for commercial use due their potential impact on trade with countries that prohibit the import of genetically modified rice. About half of the Arkansas rice crop is exported.

In August, the USDA announced that trace amounts had been found in the U.S. rice supply of the LLRICE601 protein that is present in a non-commercial cultivar of transgenic rice developed by Bayer CropScience. The USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service is searching for the source of the contamination.

The UA Division of Agriculture’s rice breeding program and foundation seed program are based at the Rice Research and Extension Center (RREC) near Stuttgart.

“We begin with a small amount of genetically pure seed from plant breeders. We plant that seed and manage the fields very carefully to produce genetically pure foundation seed for sale to seed growers and dealers,” Shult said.

Seed companies then use the foundation seed to grow “certified” and “registered” seed for sale to farmers. The process is regulated by the Arkansas State Plant Board to assure that the supply of seed for planting meets quality standards.

RREC Director Christopher Deren said, “Our policy is that we don’t work with transgenic rice on the center.” The policy is to eliminate the possibility of transgenic seed being accidentally mixed with breeder or foundation seed, he said.

“We submitted samples of breeder and foundation seed from the past three years to an independent laboratory for testing, and the LLRICE601 protein was not detected in any sample,” Deren said.

Deren said seed samples from RREC were tested by Biodiagnostics of River Falls, Wis. They included foundation seed of the varieties Cocodrie for 2004, ’05 and ’06; Wells for ’04, ’05 and ’06; Cybonnet for ’04, ’05 and ’06; Banks for ’04 and ’05; Spring for ’05 and ’06; Francis for ’05 and ’06; and Cheniere for 2006.

Breeder seed tested, all from 2006, were the varieties Wells, Cybonnet, Spring, Francis and Cheniere. A sample of head row seed of the CL171AR variety from 2005 was also tested.
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