Study by Klümper and Quaim
Klümper and Quaim showed in a broad Meta-Analysis that
in GM cultures the use of chemical pesticides can be reduced by 37%. This
decrease of insecticides use is caused by insecticides resistant (IR) plants. The
amount of herbicides in herbicides tolerant (HT) plants could not be reduced, there
is even a statistically not relevant increase. This difference is evident
because IR plants prevent damages from insects and make the use of chemicals
against them unnecessary, HT plants on the other hand just have the benefit
that several herbicides can be replaced by one different. A very interesting point
in this paper is the fact that they showed that the results from independent studies
does not much differ from studies paid by the industry.[1]
Study by Benbrook
In the study of Benbrook there are converse results.
He found a total increase of pesticide use in GM cultures. He also quantifies
an overall decrease of insecticide use and an increase of herbicide use, but in
this study there is a plus in herbicide use in total.[2]
This difference between these two articles could be
explained by the designs of the two papers. Klümper and Quaim compared studies
from all around the world published since 1999 (see Table S1 of their paper).
Benbrook in comparison used data from the United States and compared the
different years. He found a constant increase in pesticides use because of
resistant weeds and insects. Maybe this effect is not included properly in the
Klümper and Quaim studies because they have older material and in other
countries than the U.S. GM plants are not used for such a long time and
resistances had no time to develop.
Debate around the Benbrook study
The study of Benbrook is criticised by several
scientists and organisations. In an online article on geneticliteracyproject.org
Graham Brookes of PG Economics said, Benbrook made some subjective estimations
about his data.[3]
In the same article it is written that Brookes has made his own study with the
same data with contradicting results. But this study is made with data from all
around the world and so there is the same problem with resistant weeds and
insects mentioned in the last paragraph.[4] This is not good
researched or intended false information by this site. Another point that makes
me sceptical about this issue is the massive critic on PG Economics because of their
close bounds to the industry. (See my comment in Bettinas first blog)
Conclusion
Working on this blog showed me again what a controversy
theme GM plants and that there is lot of biased and false information on the
web and even in scientific papers. Not only from the industry with their
financial interests but also from the Anti-GM movement. I think this is a sign that
science got a massive problem with independency especially in a field like biotechnologies
where a lot of money is needed to conduct studies. For future work on this topic
I will use sources very thoughtful and always check the authors’ background.
[1] Klümper, W., Qaim, M. (2014). A Meta-Analysis of the
Impacts of Genetically Modified Crops. PLoS ONE 9(11)
[2] Benbrook, C.M. (2012). Impacts
of genetically engineered crops on pesticide use in the U.S. - the first
sixteen years. Environmental
Sciences Europe 24.
[3]Entine, J.: Scientists challenge
organic backer Benbrook claims that GM crops increase pesticide spraying. Found
the 13. April 2015 on: http://www.geneticliteracyproject.org/2012/10/scientists-journalists-challenge-organic-scientist-benbrook-claims-that-gm-crops-increase-pesticide-spraying-harm-the-environment/
[4]Brookes G., Barfoot, P.
(2012). GM Crops & Food. Biotechnology in Agriculture and the Food
Chain
3(2).
Dear Stefan
AntwortenLöschenThank you for this thoughtful blog. You made good summaries and drew your own conclusions. In addition to checking on the authors backgound I would suggest the following: checking on where the article is published, checking the data itself (how it was used and what data was selected), on using your own common sense - are these conclusions logical? - and on reading different pieces on a topic. A lot of work I know!
good work for this blog. I'm glad the blog lead you to this conclusion!
Best wishes
Petra
Dear Stefan
AntwortenLöschenGood summary of the article. What I liked especially was that you gave reasons for some of the results.
In your paragraph about the study of Benbrook you wrote that Klümper and Qaim used older material than Benbrook, whereas, you mentioned some sentences before that they used material since 1999. This seems a bit contradictory to me. Moreover, I couldn’t find that they used material published since 1999 but since 1995 as mentioned in the first paragraph of Materials and Methods – Literature search.
I agree with your conclusion. It is up to ourselves to check, whether a source is trustworthy and reliable. It’s advisable to be critical about the sources and also about the impact, which industrial funding might have on a publication.
All in all, you wrote a very good blog. And one last hint: check your citations – it’s not Quaim but Qaim. ;)
Cheers
Priska
Hi Stefan!
AntwortenLöschenGood work, you wrote a very readable blog with lots of interesting inputs. Your conclusions about the two studies from Klümper & Qaim and Benbrook are well summarised. As well as I, you could go a bit more into detail with the statistical results. After I read yours and all our colleagues blogs, I am more than ever sure that GM-plants is one of the most frequently discussed topic. It is very difficult to find trustworthy information in the web, like you mentioned in your blog we always have to be careful and check the background information about the studies.
Best regards,
Gianna
Hey Stefan
AntwortenLöschenYour final thoughts about the difficulty to find correct and trustworthy sources is very aptly. You found the crux of the matter of these blog exercises ;-)
In my eyes, on one hand, it is sad, that trustworthy sources are mostly harder to find than false information on the other hand it is very fascinating much information is available about every topic and I think there is always something true in every "false" information. This then leads to discussions and a discussion is better than just accept facts without resistance.
bye Hans
Hi Stefan
AntwortenLöschenVery good blog. It seems that you had a close look at the numbers and the methods of the two studies and you wrote a careful summary and conclusion with lots of good points. I agree with you that one important reason for the partly diverging results is surely the quite different design of the two papers. It is certainly a good idea to check the background of authors on GM topics carefully, as you already did with Brookes. However, it seems possible to me that a lot of scientists working on this topic have naturally a rather clear attitude towards it ,which makes it maybe difficult to judge if their results are now reliable despite their attitude or not. Of course it gets quite suspicious if the attitude is extreme …or if money plays too much into it.
Best greetings
Bettina