Soil & Health Association of New Zealand
(Est. 1941)
Publishers of ORGANIC NZ
12 June 2011
AgResearch Transgender Goats To Be Milked.
AgResearch’s genetically engineered (GE) goat experiments have a new bizarre twist with surviving GE pregnancies
producing mostly transgender offspring, that AgResearch staff term ‘goys,’ according to the Soil & Health Association of NZ.
An AgResearch farm manager recently revealed to Soil & Health and GE Free NZ, during a tour of its Ruakura GE animal field trial site, that most of the GE goats produced were
transgender. It appeared that about 75% were “goys” with the remainder female.
“The “goys”, females in sterile male bodies, are to be induced into milking to ascertain whether the intended
genetically engineered (GE) human protein will be expressed in the milk,” said Soil & Health – Organic NZ spokesperson Steffan Browning.
Previous GE cattle pregnancies have only 5% success, with the goats reported to have a success rate of possibly 15%,
although one flock of about 18 recipient does failed to hold one GE embryo of a particular experiment. AgResearch has a
track record of resultant GE offspring prone to a variety of disabilities including arthritis, respiratory distress,
deformities and ruptured ovaries.(1)
“The 15 “goys” we saw had four true sisters, with one induced to milking at six months following AgResearch’s in-house
ethics committee approval.”(2)
“Although grateful to AgResearch for hosting GE Free NZ President Claire Bleakley and myself for a tour of the
AgResearch Ruakura GE animal facility, we were concerned at the continued animal welfare issues and the level of
contaminated surface water that was draining off the experimental property.”
“Considering that a recent report showed AgResearch scientists intentionally corrupting monitoring research of risky
microbial horizontal gene transfer (HGT), these unnatural reproductive outcomes and continued animal welfare issues,
should spell the end of the Ruakura GE experiments,” said Mr Browning.(3)
“Good animal welfare records and a GE free reputation are very important for New Zealand’s trading image and
increasingly demanded by consumers. Cruel experiments for a GE farming future are not what either New Zealanders or
valuable overseas consumers want.”(4)
“AgResearch is at the cruel operator end of a business partnership with a dirty drug manufacturer, Genzyme, who has been
investigated and fined by the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA) for poor manufacturing practices.” (5)
“Knowing that it would be a nuisance for AgResearch and its overseas partners, the government disbanded the New Zealand
Bioethics Council two years ago in full knowledge that distressing animal welfare issues are clearly predictable in GE
research. The Bioethics Council had been calling for ethics reviews of all GE animal experiments.” (6)
“The AgResearch Ruakura facility is currently the only active GE field trial operating in the country, although Scion
intends planting some GE pine trees at its GE field trial site in Rotorua this winter.”
Closing both field trials could return Aotearoa New Zealand’s environment to a full GE free status.
Soil & Health wants AgResearch’s cruel and unnatural animal experiments stopped immediately, the reinstatement of the New
Zealand Bioethics Council, and for the government to move quickly towards desirable high value sustainable, animal
friendly, GE free, and organic production.
NOTES:
(1) http://www.ermanz.govt.nz/no/compliance/agresearch.html ERMA Annual reports on GMF98009 and GMD 02028
(2) Photographs attached and available at a higher resolution.
(3) http://www.organic-systems.org/journal/Vol_6(1)/pdf/6(1)-Heinemann-pp3-19..pdf
(6) http://www.mfe.govt.nz/website/closed-sites/images/bioethics.jpg New Zealand Bioethics Council, August 2004 Report: The Cultural, Ethical and Spiritual Dimensions of the Use of Human
Genes in Other Organisms.
Steffan Browning
The Soil & Health Association of New Zealand Inc