Science And Ethics Needed To Appraise GM
Robert Mann The open letter
(Guardian May 21) from biologist Richard Dawkins to Prince
Charles accuses HRH of 'hostility to science' and of
'embracing an ill-assorted jumble of mutually contradictory
alternatives' in his reservations about genetic modification
(GM). The first distinction to make is that GM is
technology, not science - though it does rely on a version
of science which I discuss briefly below. Dawkins thinks
HRH "may have an exaggerated idea of the naturalness of
'traditional' or 'organic' agriculture. Agriculture has
always been unnatural. . . . Wheat, be it ever so
wholemeal and stoneground, is not a natural food for Homo
sapiens." Allowing tools as natural, so that milling wheat
to flour counts as natural, how is wheat not a natural food
for us? Dawkins' explanation: "A wheat grain is a
genetically modified grass seed, just as a pekinese is a
genetically modified wolf. Almost every morsel of our food
is genetically modified - admittedly by artificial selection
not artificial mutation, but the end result is the same."
This is perhaps the most stupendous falsehood in the whole
GM debate. GM inserts foreign genes by processes very
different from those that led from the wolf to the pekinese
and those which produced modern wheat strains. GM is
nothing like mere speeded-up natural processes. Indeed, its
benefits are routinely claimed on just that basis - that
nature will never insert jellyfish genes into sugar-cane,
for example. But when drawbacks of GM are suggested, the
proponents withdraw po-faced behind this smokescreen of
deceit 'we're not doing anything unnatural'. A PR agent
uttering this falsehood may just be too lazy to have
researched the truth first (bearing in mind that truth is
not a PR virtue); a biologist stating it is harder to
forgive.
Dawkins says "the hysterical opposition to the
possible risks from GM crops" may divert attention from
"definite dangers which are already well understood but
largely ignored. The evolution of antibiotic-resistant
strains of bacteria is something that a Darwinian might have
foreseen from the day antibiotics were discovered.
Unfortunately the warning voices have been rather quiet, and
now they are drowned by the baying cacophony: 'GM GM GM GM
GM GM!' " That account is almost unrecognisable. In the
late 1960s official advisors, led by Professor Wm Hayes FRS
(doyen of British microbial geneticists), pointed out that
routine addition of antibiotics to bulk agribusiness
stockfeeds would select multiple drug-resistance transfer
factors which could then proliferate by bacterial
promiscuity causing severe hazards, at least in hospitals.
This grave warning was ignored, and some credit could be
given to critics of GM who have lately been pointing out the
misuse of antibiotic-resistance genes in typical GM crops.
These recent complaints, far from drowning mainstream
scientists' warnings, have valuably augmented them.
Evolution includes "no natural foresight, no mechanism for
warning that present selfish gains are leading to species
extinction" quoth Dawkins. What is the evidence for his
assertion? Only his further novel claim "99 per cent of all
species that have ever lived are extinct." Experts do agree
that most species have gone extinct (90 per cent is the
usual estimate); but why should any number of extinct
species be interpreted as evidence that evolution is blind?
If it were blind, how could any coherent ecology have
evolved let alone proliferated in variety & complexity over
several billion years? Dawkins rightly points out that
long-term planning is precious and fragile. He deduces "we
must use all our scientific artifice to protect it". Quite
so; let us begin by understanding what travesties of science
are entailed in GM as now practised. Here are some of this
trade's drastic falsehoods:- * They pretend the DNA
alphabet has only 4 letters (G, C, A & T) when it has been
well known for decades that DNA also contains 'odd' bases -
methylC, methylG, and others - whose biological functions
are little understood. * They pretend that the effects
of genes inserted by radically unnatural methods are
predictable, when they are known to be extremely variable
(usually lethal). * They pretend that a cell surviving
such gene-insertion processes, and then selected on just one
property - resistance to an antibiotic - and then grown into
a whole organism, e.g. a potato, will have all properties at
least as good as those of a normal organism. Never since
the Nazi attempts to legitimize racism has science been so
suddenly and severely degraded. Apologists for GM posing as
defenders of true science are taking up an untenable, indeed
ludicrous, stance. According to Dawkins, thinking "here,
means scientific thinking. No more effective method exists.
If it did, science would incorporate it." On the contrary,
thinking about GM will require non-scientific ideas as well
as the valuable roles that scientific thinking will
contribute. To assess artificial movements of genes from
humans to cows, we will need not only a clear picture of the
science involved but also a wider consideration of questions
beyond science - ethical questions. I for one would take my
lead from the Prince on ethical issues, rather than from one
who keeps on saying that there is no plan in evolution but
only the blind outworkings of the laws of chemistry through
"selfish" genes. Richard Dawkins boasts the title, as
Guardian readers were told, "the Charles Simonyi Professor
of the Public Understanding of Science" at Oxford
University. Not all readers would realise this means Oxford
has accepted funding from one of the original Megasoft
profiteers. The claim that GM is based in good science is
consistent with this commercial connection. This reply
(which has here been slightly shortened for space reasons)
was sent to the Guardian newspaper but not published; Dr
Mann, a biochemist, was the University of Auckland's first
Senior Lecturer in charge of Environmental Studies and has
been involved in scientific appraisals of GM since it was
invented. - Robt Mann consultant ecologist P O Box
28878 Remuera, Auckland 1005, New Zealand (9) 524
2949