Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Effects of climate change on fungal diseases of trees
- 2 Effects of climate change on Fusarium foot rot of winter wheat in the United Kingdom
- 3 Effects of UV-B radiation (280–320 nm) on foliar saprotrophs and pathogens
- 4 Implications of global warming and rising sea-levels for macrofungi in UK dune systems
- 5 Red Data Lists and decline in fruiting of macromycetes in relation to pollution and loss of habitat
- 6 Effects of dry-deposited SO2 and sulphite on saprotrophic fungi and decomposition of tree leaf litter
- 7 Effects of atmospheric pollutants on phyllosphere and endophytic fungi
- 8 Influences of acid mist and ozone on the fluorescein diacetate activity of leaf litter
- 9 Mycorrhizas and environmental stress
- 10 Myccorhizas, succession, and the rehabilitation of deforested lands in the humid tropics
- 11 Potential effects on the soil mycoflora of changes in the UK agricultural policy for upland grasslands
- 12 Uptake and immobilization of caesium in UK grassland and forest soils by fungi, following the Chernobyl accident
- 13 Effects of pollutants on aquatic hyphomycetes colonizing leaf material in freshwaters
- 14 Fungi and salt stress
- 15 Fungal sequestration, mobilization and transformation of metals and metalloids
- 16 Urban, industrial and agricultural effects on lichens
- 17 Fungal interactions with metals and radionuclides for environmental bioremediation
- 18 Impact of genetically-modified microorganisms on the terrestrial microbiota including fungi
- 19 Has chaos theory a place in environmental mycology?
- Index of generic and specific names
- Subject index
18 - Impact of genetically-modified microorganisms on the terrestrial microbiota including fungi
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Effects of climate change on fungal diseases of trees
- 2 Effects of climate change on Fusarium foot rot of winter wheat in the United Kingdom
- 3 Effects of UV-B radiation (280–320 nm) on foliar saprotrophs and pathogens
- 4 Implications of global warming and rising sea-levels for macrofungi in UK dune systems
- 5 Red Data Lists and decline in fruiting of macromycetes in relation to pollution and loss of habitat
- 6 Effects of dry-deposited SO2 and sulphite on saprotrophic fungi and decomposition of tree leaf litter
- 7 Effects of atmospheric pollutants on phyllosphere and endophytic fungi
- 8 Influences of acid mist and ozone on the fluorescein diacetate activity of leaf litter
- 9 Mycorrhizas and environmental stress
- 10 Myccorhizas, succession, and the rehabilitation of deforested lands in the humid tropics
- 11 Potential effects on the soil mycoflora of changes in the UK agricultural policy for upland grasslands
- 12 Uptake and immobilization of caesium in UK grassland and forest soils by fungi, following the Chernobyl accident
- 13 Effects of pollutants on aquatic hyphomycetes colonizing leaf material in freshwaters
- 14 Fungi and salt stress
- 15 Fungal sequestration, mobilization and transformation of metals and metalloids
- 16 Urban, industrial and agricultural effects on lichens
- 17 Fungal interactions with metals and radionuclides for environmental bioremediation
- 18 Impact of genetically-modified microorganisms on the terrestrial microbiota including fungi
- 19 Has chaos theory a place in environmental mycology?
- Index of generic and specific names
- Subject index
Summary
Introduction
Recently there has been a considerable increase in interest in developing genetically modified microorganisms (GMMs) for a range of different purposes in the environment such as bioremediation, mineral leaching, improvement of soil nutrient status and biological control. Numerous experiments, virtually all with bacteria, have been carried out using genetic manipulation to increase or decrease expression of genes associated with these processes or to transfer or delete them (see Crawford et al., 1993; Stotzky et al., 1993; Lindow, Panopoulos & MacFarland, 1989). However, before commercial development of these functional GMMs can occur, the environmental risks associated with the release into the environment of GMMs lacking deliberate functional manipulation must be addressed. Consequently, for the purpose of estimating the risks of such GMM releases, a series of step-wise assessment procedures has been developed. This approach was recommended by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD, 1992) and has been adopted in regulatory frameworks in most countries. These start with laboratory and glasshouse studies under contained conditions and, depending on the results, are followed by field releases and post-release monitoring procedures.
Terminology associated with risk assessment is not strictly defined (see Teng & Yang, 1993), but essentially the key initial process in the risk assessment procedure is to identify any potential hazards associated with the use of a GMM. These include pathogenicity, phenotypic and genetic stability of the parental strain, potential for survival, establishment and dissemination, potential for gene transfer and, finally, potential to affect or cause an impact on other organisms or ecological processes.
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- Fungi and Environmental Change , pp. 299 - 316Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996
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