8 research outputs found
Potential for longevity of novel genetically modified herbicide-tolerant traits in the Irish landscape
With the renewed interest in
GM crop technology in Ireland, some concern has been raised in relation to the
potential impact on biodiversity in the Irish agri-environment. This concern
can focus on the potential for a transgenic trait to cross to wild relatives. A
novel trait will be judged to have persisted in a wild population via the
successful production of seeds, such that these seeds are viable and result in
the establishment of a self-sustaining population. In the case of a herbicide
tolerant (HT) trait, feral and volunteer populations can only remain viable if
managed with applications of the herbicide that the trait is designed to
resist. This surviving population of HT plants would then need to compete
successfully with other wild plants in order to prevail in the landscape and
persist over time. There are few agricultural crops that can manage this
combination, but as oilseed rape plants are often noted along roadsides and
hedgerows in Ireland, it is correct to assume that this crop has the ability to
be a successful feral survivor. This paper presents the results of a thought
experiment, derived exclusively using the academic literature, on the issue of
longevity. This is done by taking four hypothetical case scenarios and
examining the potential for a combination of events to take place for oilseed
rape (Brassica napus), selected here
because it has a high potential for 'escaping' via pollen- and/or seed-mediated
gene flow. A lack of quantitative data on Irish farmland biodiversity hinders
solid conclusions, but when management pressure is eased biodiversity stress is
lessened.EPA STRIVETeagascAuthor has checked copyrightRB 17/04/1
Mapping out the Great Irish Famine in fiction, 1847–1870: imperial counternarratives
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Palaeoecology of human impact during the historic period: palynology and geochemistry of a peat deposit at Abbeyknockmoy, Co. Galway, Ireland
Understanding the present condition of the cultural landscape requires a palaeoecological perspective with a particular emphasis on the growing intensity of human impact over the last few centuries. Detailed palynological investigations of the uppermost metre of peat at Abbeyknockmoy Bog were supplemented by silicon and titanium analyses to give additional proxy records for the intensity of human impact on the local landscape. The AMS radiocarbon chronology for this profile is constrained by the presence of the Hekla-1 tephra isochron of AD 1104. The palaeoenvironmental evidence correlates closely to the local historical and archaeological records. The results indicate a late Iron Age lull in human impact in the early centuries AD, which is followed by increasing agricultural activity during the early Christian period. The establishment of the Cistercian monastery of Abbeyknockmoy in the twelfth century AD had a significant impact upon the landscape. A peak in deforestation and farming activity is registered in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries AD. The silicon and titanium records correlate strongly with the pollen indicators for increased human disturbance