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GE Trees May Be Even More Damaging to the Environment than GE Foods April 27, 2013 | 6,480 views | + Add to Favorites
Story at-a-glance
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The
documentary A Silent Forest: The Growing Threat, Genetically Engineered
Trees discusses how genetically engineered (GE) trees may adversely
impact ecological systems on a grand scale, with potentially
catastrophic effects
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Trees
are being genetically altered to give them unnatural characteristics,
such as the ability to kill insects, tolerate toxic herbicides, grow
abnormally fast, or have decreased lignin for the convenience of the
paper industry
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Genetically
engineered trees vastly differ from annual GE crops like corn and
soybeans because trees can live for decades and even centuries in the
wild; once GE trees escape the confines of their plantation, they are
extremely difficult, if not impossible, to eradicate
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Many
trees are able to spread their seeds and pollen for hundreds and even
thousands of miles, making native forests vulnerable to
cross-contamination, which poses an enormous threat to worldwide
ecosystems
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The
biotech industry and US government are rushing ahead without performing
appropriate safety studies, doing everything they can to hasten the
approval of GE technology while silencing the opposition
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