Devlin Robert H, D'Andrade Mark, Uh Mitchell, Biagi Carlo A
Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 4160 Marine Drive, West Vancouver, BC, Canada V7V 1N6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004 Jun 22;101(25):9303-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0400023101. Epub 2004 Jun 10.
Environmental risk assessment of genetically modified organisms requires determination of their fitness and invasiveness relative to conspecifics and other ecosystem members. Cultured growth hormone transgenic coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) have enhanced feeding capacity and growth, which can result in large enhancements in body size (>7-fold) relative to nontransgenic salmon, but in nature, the ability to compete for available food is a key factor determining survival fitness and invasiveness of a genotype. When transgenic and nontransgenic salmon were cohabitated and competed for different levels of food, transgenic salmon consistently outgrew nontransgenic fish and could affect the growth of nontransgenic cohorts except when food availability was high. When food abundance was low, dominant individuals emerged, invariably transgenic, that directed strong agonistic and cannibalistic behavior to cohorts and dominated the acquisition of limited food resources. When food availability was low, all groups containing transgenic salmon experienced population crashes or complete extinctions, whereas groups containing only nontransgenic salmon had good (72.0 +/- 4.3% SE) survival, and their population biomass continued to increase. Thus, effects of growth hormone transgenic salmon on experimental populations were primarily mediated by an interaction between food availability and population structure. These data, while indicative of forces which may act on natural populations, also underscore the importance of genotype by environment interactions in influencing risk assessment data for genetically modified organisms and suggest that, for species such as salmon which are derived from large complex ecosystems, considerable caution is warranted in applying data from individual studies.
转基因生物的环境风险评估需要确定它们相对于同种生物和其他生态系统成员的适应性和入侵性。养殖的生长激素转基因银大麻哈鱼(Oncorhynchus kisutch)具有增强的摄食能力和生长速度,相对于非转基因大麻哈鱼,其体型可能会大幅增大(超过7倍),但在自然环境中,争夺可用食物的能力是决定一个基因型生存适应性和入侵性的关键因素。当转基因和非转基因大麻哈鱼共同生活并争夺不同水平的食物时,转基因大麻哈鱼的生长速度始终超过非转基因鱼,并且会影响非转基因群体的生长,除非食物供应量很高。当食物丰富度较低时,占主导地位的个体出现,无一例外都是转基因个体,它们对群体表现出强烈的攻击和同类相食行为,并主导了对有限食物资源的获取。当食物供应量较低时,所有包含转基因大麻哈鱼的群体都经历了种群崩溃或完全灭绝,而仅包含非转基因大麻哈鱼的群体则有良好的(72.0 +/- 4.3%标准误)存活率,并且它们的种群生物量持续增加。因此,生长激素转基因大麻哈鱼对实验种群的影响主要是由食物供应量和种群结构之间的相互作用介导的。这些数据虽然表明了可能作用于自然种群的力量,但也强调了基因型与环境相互作用在影响转基因生物风险评估数据方面的重要性,并表明,对于源自大型复杂生态系统的大麻哈鱼等物种,在应用个体研究的数据时需要相当谨慎。