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			By having toxins built into the plant 
			itself, farmers can reduce their use of environmentally unfriendly 
			insecticide sprays. But as any first-year evolutionary biology 
			student can tell you, insects are like the Borg in Star Trek: they 
			quickly adapt. And this is precisely what is happening - but in ways 
			that have startled the researchers themselves. 
 The development also raises the question of the potential futility of having to change the genetic structure of crops in perpetuity; given that insects are constantly evolving, 
 
			 Mutated pests are quickly adapting to biotech crops in unpredicted and disturbing ways 
 Case in point are cotton bollworms. 
 
			To deal with these pests, genetic 
			scientists have developed an insect-killing cotton plant that 
			produces toxins derived from the Bt bacterium (geneticists say that 
			these toxins are harmless to most other creatures, including 
			humans). But the bollworms are developing a resistance. Scientists 
			have observed that a rare genetic mutation in bollworms makes them 
			immune to Bt - and that the mutation isn't so rare any more. 
 
			To stay ahead of the game, Tabashnik 
			studied bollworms in the lab just to see how they would adapt to the 
			toxin. Then, expecting to see the same sorts of adaptations in the 
			real world, he took a look at bollworms in China. 
 Speaking through a University of Arizona release, Tabashnik noted that, 
 A particularly big surprise was that the real world mutations will be more challenging to deal with from a genetic perspective. 
 
			They identified two unrelated, dominant 
			mutations in the field populations - and by dominant they mean that 
			one copy of the genetic variant is enough to confer resistance to Bt 
			toxin. This kind of dominant resistance cannot be readily slowed 
			with refuges, which are specially designed plants that work to 
			dilute the population of susceptible insects (this process makes it 
			difficult for two resistant insects to mate and produce resistant 
			offspring). 
			 Mutated pests are quickly adapting to biotech crops in unpredicted and disturbing ways 
 As far as the real world mutated bollworms are concerned, they're starting to take off in China. 
 
			The researchers discovered that 
			resistance-conferring mutations in cotton bollworm were three times 
			more common in northern China than in areas of northwestern China 
			where less Bt cotton has been grown. 
 This "trouble on the horizon" indicates that geneticists are in the midst of an arms race with insects. 
 
			Each measure they enact will likely be 
			countered by the ever-adapting insects. It's difficult to know at 
			this point just how modified the crops will have to be to withstand 
			these pests, or how these new crops could impact on human health and 
			the very constitution of the insects themselves. 
 
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