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Dive into the research topics where Alan Raybould is active.

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Featured researches published by Alan Raybould.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Assessment of risk of insect-resistant transgenic crops to nontarget arthropods

Jörg Romeis; Detlef Bartsch; Franz Bigler; Marco P. Candolfi; Marco Gielkens; Susan E. Hartley; Richard L. Hellmich; Joseph E. Huesing; Paul C. Jepson; Raymond J. Layton; Hector Quemada; Alan Raybould; Robyn Rose; Joachim Schiemann; Mark K. Sears; Anthony M. Shelton; Jeremy Sweet; Zigfridas Vaituzis; Jeffrey D. Wolt

An international initiative is developing a scientifically rigorous approach to evaluate the potential risks to nontarget arthropods (NTAs) posed by insect-resistant, genetically modified (IRGM) crops. It adapts the tiered approach to risk assessment that is used internationally within regulatory toxicology and environmental sciences. The approach focuses on the formulation and testing of clearly stated risk hypotheses, making maximum use of available data and using formal decision guidelines to progress between testing stages (or tiers). It is intended to provide guidance to regulatory agencies that are currently developing their own NTA risk assessment guidelines for IRGM crops and to help harmonize regulatory requirements between different countries and different regions of the world.


Transgenic Research | 2011

Recommendations for the design of laboratory studies on non-target arthropods for risk assessment of genetically engineered plants

Jörg Romeis; Richard L. Hellmich; Marco P. Candolfi; Keri Carstens; Adinda De Schrijver; Angharad M. R. Gatehouse; Rod A. Herman; Joseph E. Huesing; Morven A. McLean; Alan Raybould; Anthony M. Shelton; Annabel Waggoner

This paper provides recommendations on experimental design for early-tier laboratory studies used in risk assessments to evaluate potential adverse impacts of arthropod-resistant genetically engineered (GE) plants on non-target arthropods (NTAs). While we rely heavily on the currently used proteins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) in this discussion, the concepts apply to other arthropod-active proteins. A risk may exist if the newly acquired trait of the GE plant has adverse effects on NTAs when they are exposed to the arthropod-active protein. Typically, the risk assessment follows a tiered approach that starts with laboratory studies under worst-case exposure conditions; such studies have a high ability to detect adverse effects on non-target species. Clear guidance on how such data are produced in laboratory studies assists the product developers and risk assessors. The studies should be reproducible and test clearly defined risk hypotheses. These properties contribute to the robustness of, and confidence in, environmental risk assessments for GE plants. Data from NTA studies, collected during the analysis phase of an environmental risk assessment, are critical to the outcome of the assessment and ultimately the decision taken by regulatory authorities on the release of a GE plant. Confidence in the results of early-tier laboratory studies is a precondition for the acceptance of data across regulatory jurisdictions and should encourage agencies to share useful information and thus avoid redundant testing.


Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 1994

Will hybrids of genetically modified crops invade natural communities

Alan Raybould; Alan Gray

A perceived danger of genetic modification of crops is that crop hybrids may not only become more-pernicious weeds of agriculture but that they may also become invasive of natural communities. New information on the extent of crop hybridization and the characteristics of modified crops is facilitating more-accurate assessments of these risks.


Chemosphere | 2013

Deriving criteria to select arthropod species for laboratory tests to assess the ecological risks from cultivating arthropod-resistant genetically engineered crops.

Joerg Romeis; Alan Raybould; Franz Bigler; Marco P. Candolfi; Richard L. Hellmich; Joseph E. Huesing; Anthony M. Shelton

UNLABELLED Arthropods form a major part of the biodiversity in agricultural landscapes. Many species are valued because they provide ecosystem services, including biological control, pollination and decomposition, or because they are of conservation interest. Some arthropods reduce crop yield and quality, and conventional chemical pesticides, biological control agents and genetically engineered (GE) crops are used to control them. A common concern addressed in the ecological risk assessment (ERA) that precedes regulatory approval of these pest control methods is their potential to adversely affect valued non-target arthropods (NTAs). A key concept of ERA is early-tier testing using worst-case exposure conditions in the laboratory and surrogate test species that are most likely to reveal an adverse effect. If no adverse effects are observed in those species at high exposures, confidence of negligible ecological risk from the use of the pest control method is increased. From experience with chemical pesticides and biological control agents, an approach is proposed for selecting test species for early-tier ERA of GE arthropod-resistant crops. Surrogate species should be selected that most closely meet three criteria: (i) Potential sensitivity: species should be the most likely to be sensitive to the arthropod-active compound based on the known spectrum of activity of the active ingredient, its mode of action, and the phylogenetic relatedness of the test and target species; (ii) RELEVANCE species should be representative of valued taxa or functional groups that are most likely to be exposed to the arthropod-active compound in the field; and (iii) Availability and reliability: suitable life-stages of the test species must be obtainable in sufficient quantity and quality, and validated test protocols must be available that allow consistent detection of adverse effects on ecologically relevant parameters. Our proposed approach ensures that the most suitable species are selected for testing and that the resulting data provide the most rigorous test of the risk hypothesis of no adverse effect in order to increase the quality and efficiency of ERAs for cultivation of GE crops.


Nature | 1998

Crop genetics: Reducing transgene escape routes

Alan Gray; Alan Raybould

One of the main concerns about genetically modified crops is the risk of contaminating ‘natural’ populations with the introduced genes. A technical development that reduces this risk is now reported, and the principle is simple — rather than introducing transgenes into the nuclear genome, from which they can be spread in the form of pollen, the genes are introduced into the chloroplast DNA. Chloroplasts are maternally inherited, so wild relatives of transgenic plants cannot be contaminated.


Transgenic Research | 2011

Non-target organism effects tests on Vip3A and their application to the ecological risk assessment for cultivation of MIR162 maize

Alan Raybould; Demetra Vlachos

Transgenic crops producing insecticidal proteins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) provide economic, environmental and health benefits by maintaining or increasing crop yields with fewer applications of insecticide. To sustain these benefits, it is important to delay the evolution of insect resistance to the proteins, and to ensure that the proteins do not harm non-target organisms, particularly those that may control secondary pests that would otherwise flourish because of reduced insecticide applications. Vip3A is a Bt vegetative insecticidal protein that is active against lepidopterous pests. It has a different mode of action from other proteins for control of Lepidoptera in current Bt crops, and when combined with these proteins, it should help to delay the evolution of pest resistance to Bt crops. This paper presents data on the effects of Vip3A on non-target organisms, and an ecological risk assessment of MIR162 maize, which expresses Vip3Aa20. Laboratory studies indicate few adverse effects of Vip3A to non-target organisms: 11 of 12 species tested showed no adverse effects when exposed to high concentrations of Vip3A relative to estimated exposures resulting from cultivation of MIR162 maize. Daphnia magna exposed to Vip3Aa20 were unaffected in terms of survival or fecundity, but grew slightly more slowly than unexposed controls. The data indicate that cultivation of MIR162 maize poses negligible risk to non-target organisms, and that crops producing Vip3A are unlikely to adversely affect biological control organisms such that benefits from reduced insecticide applications are lost.


Transgenic Research | 2015

Genetic basis and detection of unintended effects in genetically modified crop plants

Gregory S. Ladics; Andrew Bartholomaeus; Phil Bregitzer; Nancy Doerrer; Alan Gray; Thomas Holzhauser; Mark C. Jordan; Paul Keese; Esther J. Kok; Phil Macdonald; Wayne A. Parrott; Laura Privalle; Alan Raybould; Seung Y. Rhee; Elena A. Rice; Jörg Romeis; Justin N. Vaughn; Jean-Michel Wal; Kevin C. Glenn

In January 2014, an international meeting sponsored by the International Life Sciences Institute/Health and Environmental Sciences Institute and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency titled “Genetic Basis of Unintended Effects in Modified Plants” was held in Ottawa, Canada, bringing together over 75 scientists from academia, government, and the agro-biotech industry. The objectives of the meeting were to explore current knowledge and identify areas requiring further study on unintended effects in plants and to discuss how this information can inform and improve genetically modified (GM) crop risk assessments. The meeting featured presentations on the molecular basis of plant genome variability in general, unintended changes at the molecular and phenotypic levels, and the development and use of hypothesis-driven evaluations of unintended effects in assessing conventional and GM crops. The development and role of emerging “omics” technologies in the assessment of unintended effects was also discussed. Several themes recurred in a number of talks; for example, a common observation was that no system for genetic modification, including conventional methods of plant breeding, is without unintended effects. Another common observation was that “unintended” does not necessarily mean “harmful”. This paper summarizes key points from the information presented at the meeting to provide readers with current viewpoints on these topics.


Advances in Ecological Research | 2013

Networking Agroecology: Integrating the Diversity of Agroecosystem Interactions

David A. Bohan; Alan Raybould; Christian Mulder; Guy Woodward; Alireza Tamaddoni-Nezhad; Nico Blüthgen; Michael J. O. Pocock; Stephen Muggleton; Darren M. Evans; Julia Astegiano; François Massol; Nicolas Loeuille; Sandrine Petit; Sarina Macfadyen

Worldwide demand for food will increase dramatically in the future as global human population grows. Increasing efficiency of crop production is unlikely to be sufficient to meet the demand, presenting a long-term threat to humanity’s ‘well-being’. Knowledge of the system-level behaviour of agroecosystems, however, remains surprisingly limited, reflecting the agricultural focus on particular species. This is starting to change towards an ecosystem and network-based approach, following the recent revolution in thinking about resource use and sustainability in our other global food production industry: commercial fisheries. Agroecosystems appear to retain plasticity of ecological processes that might be manipulated for productivity and sustainability. Network structure and dynamics have substantial impacts on ecosystem performance, but evidence from agroecosystems lags behind network theory. Here, we provide an introduction to network theory and application in agroecosystems, identify network metrics for management and environmental change, and, finally, we highlight gaps in our current knowledge and key research themes. These themes include: is the structure of agroecological networks affected by sampling; how do ecosystem services ‘emerge’ empirically from ecological organization, function and network properties; how do spatial and temporal scale and resolution influence system performance; and, can network agroecology be used to design systems that maximize ecosystem services?


Transgenic Research | 2013

Characterising microbial protein test substances and establishing their equivalence with plant-produced proteins for use in risk assessments of transgenic crops

Alan Raybould; Peter M. Kilby; Gerson Graser

Most commercial transgenic crops are genetically engineered to produce new proteins. Studies to assess the risks to human and animal health, and to the environment, from the use of these crops require grams of the transgenic proteins. It is often extremely difficult to produce sufficient purified transgenic protein from the crop. Nevertheless, ample protein of acceptable purity may be produced by over-expressing the protein in microbes such as Escherichia coli. When using microbial proteins in a study for risk assessment, it is essential that their suitability as surrogates for the plant-produced transgenic proteins is established; that is, the proteins are equivalent for the purposes of the study. Equivalence does not imply that the plant and microbial proteins are identical, but that the microbial protein is sufficiently similar biochemically and functionally to the plant protein such that studies using the microbial protein provide reliable information for risk assessment of the transgenic crop. Equivalence is a judgement based on a weight of evidence from comparisons of relevant properties of the microbial and plant proteins, including activity, molecular weight, amino acid sequence, glycosylation and immuno-reactivity. We describe a typical set of methods used to compare proteins in regulatory risk assessments for transgenic crops, and discuss how risk assessors may use comparisons of proteins to judge equivalence.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2013

Genetically engineered trees for plantation forests: key considerations for environmental risk assessment

Hely Häggman; Alan Raybould; Aluízio Borém; Thomas R. Fox; Levis Handley; Magnus Hertzberg; Meng-Zu Lu; Philip Macdonald; Taichi Oguchi; Giancarlo Pasquali; Les Pearson; Gary F. Peter; Hector Quemada; Armand Séguin; Kylie Tattersall; Eugênio César Ulian; Christian Walter; Morven A. McLean

Forests are vital to the worlds ecological, social, cultural and economic well-being yet sustainable provision of goods and services from forests is increasingly challenged by pressures such as growing demand for wood and other forest products, land conversion and degradation, and climate change. Intensively managed, highly productive forestry incorporating the most advanced methods for tree breeding, including the application of genetic engineering (GE), has tremendous potential for producing more wood on less land. However, the deployment of GE trees in plantation forests is a controversial topic and concerns have been particularly expressed about potential harms to the environment. This paper, prepared by an international group of experts in silviculture, forest tree breeding, forest biotechnology and environmental risk assessment (ERA) that met in April 2012, examines how the ERA paradigm used for GE crop plants may be applied to GE trees for use in plantation forests. It emphasizes the importance of differentiating between ERA for confined field trials of GE trees, and ERA for unconfined or commercial-scale releases. In the case of the latter, particular attention is paid to characteristics of forest trees that distinguish them from shorter-lived plant species, the temporal and spatial scale of forests, and the biodiversity of the plantation forest as a receiving environment.

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David A. Bohan

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jörg Romeis

International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics

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Hector Quemada

Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

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