Biotech benefits

Conservation tillage and plant biotechnology: how new technologies can improve the environment by reducing the need to plow

This paper is relevant to the impact areas in the following areas:

Crops, , ,
Traits
Countries
Regions
Tags, ,

Abstract or Summary

Conservation tillage can provide environmental benefits, including:
Reduced soil erosion
Improved moisture content in soil
Healthier, more nutrient-enriched soil
More earthworms and beneficial soil microbes
Reduced consumption of fuel to operate equipment
The return of beneficial insects, birds and other wildlife in and around fields
Less sediment and chemical runoff entering streams
Reduced potential for flooding
Less dust and smoke to pollute the air
Less carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere

There is a strong association between the use of herbicide-tolerant biotech crops and recent improvements in tillage reduction. Four trends support this conclusion:
Weed control is a major consideration when farmers are weighing whether to implement conservation tillage, and several surveys indicate that farmers have more confidence in weed control since the introduction of herbicide-tolerant biotech crops. In some surveys, farmers say herbicide-tolerant crops enabled them to increase the amount of residue they leave on their fields.
No-till, the tillage system that most relies on good herbicide performance, has grown more than other reduced tillage systems since 1996, and nearly all the growth has occurred in crops where herbicide-tolerance technology is available � soybeans, cotton and canola. (Herbicide-tolerant corn has not been widely adopted due to pending regulatory approval in Europe, nor has no-till corn expanded as rapidly as other crops.)
Farmers who purchase herbicide-tolerant seeds use them disproportionately on their conservation tillage acres.
Farmers who do not purchase herbicide-tolerant seeds are not as likely to participate in conservation tillage.

Paper reproduced by permission of Conservation Technology Information Center.

Download

Conservation tillage and plant biotechnology: how new technologies can improve the environment by reducing the need to plow (held on an external server, and so may require additional authentication details)

CropLife International fully acknowledges the source and authors of the publication as detailed above.