jverne
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Europe is about to release its first non-native "biological control" species to curb the spread of Japanese knotweed, and about time too, says scientist Dr Matthew Cock. In this week's Green Room, he sets out the case in favour of introducing natural predators to halt the march of invasive species.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8555559.stm
This might turn very ugly. Biological control can be so unpredictable.
If the thing starts chewing on "native" agricultural crops, it will suck big time.
This is a very relevant issue for home gardeners. Major farms can't afford to weed out manually whole crop fields, like gardeners usually do. So they turn to either herbicides or bio control.
With herbicides they pollute the soil, water and food...with biological control they can destroy whole ecosystems.
In both cases the home gardener gets to pull out the short stick because big farmers need to feed the non farming population, therefore having the the final word.
And those who are not in the business don't really care about it...such a shame.
Side note: i talked to my grandfather about pests and diseases of his time...70 ago and he said they knew about 2 or 3 major illnesses/pests, nowadays there are a myriad of them.
I hope you realize that there is a limit on how much we can stretch the productivity of nature and technology won't help us as quickly as we'd like.
Not even GM plants...think of it this way, GM developers have a few laboratories working on making new plants 40hours a week, nature has the whole world and 24/7/365.
By my information the best GM producers, only made crops that resist their branded herbicide/pesticide so you can spray more of in on the crop. This is not the solution being advertised, the manufactured GM crops with integrated poisons failed big time.