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posted by martyb on Monday July 02 2018, @11:17AM   Printer-friendly
from the just-wait-until-the-Ents-get-loose dept.

High Country News reports:

[...] Scotts got permission from the USDA to plant larger fields for seed production. Farmers sowed 80 acres of bentgrass in Canyon County, Idaho, and 420 acres in Jefferson County, Oregon, north of Bend. The Oregon Department of Agriculture picked the site - an irrigated island in the sagebrush sea - to keep the plant far from the Willamette Valley. There, on the western side of the mountains, farmers grow forage and turf grass for a $1 billion-a-year seed industry.

Then two windstorms swept through the eastern Oregon fields in August of 2013, scattering flea-sized seeds well beyond the designated control area. Roundup-resistant pollen fertilized conventional bentgrass plants as far as 13 miles away.


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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Thursday July 05 2018, @12:21PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Thursday July 05 2018, @12:21PM (#702934) Journal

    What bothers me Is not the fact that the GMO plant doesn't die when they cover it with poison...

    While that's an interesting mental trainwreck to watch, why do you think they'd spray an herbicide on a plant right before they take it off the lot and put it on your plate?