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Dear Secretary
Vilsack:
A team of senior
plant and animal scientists have
recently brought to my attention
the discovery of an electron
microscopic pathogen that
appears to significantly impact
the health of plants, animals,
and probably human beings. Based
on a review of the data, it is
widespread, very serious, and is
in much higher concentrations in
Roundup Ready (RR) soybeans and
corn-suggesting a link with the
RR gene or more likely the
presence of Roundup. This
organism appears NEW to science!
This is highly
sensitive information that could
result in a collapse of US soy
and corn export markets and
significant disruption of
domestic food and feed supplies.
On the other hand, this new
organism may already be
responsible for significant harm
(see below). My colleagues and I
are therefore moving our
investigation forward with speed
and discretion, and seek
assistance from the USDA and
other entities to identify the
pathogen's source, prevalence,
implications, and remedies.
We are informing
the USDA of our findings at this
early stage, specifically due to
your pending decision regarding
approval of RR alfalfa.
Naturally, if either the RR gene
or Roundup itself is a promoter
or co-factor of this pathogen,
then such approval could be a
calamity. Based on the current
evidence, the only reasonable
action at this time would be to
delay deregulation at least
until sufficient data has
exonerated the RR system, if it
does.
For the past 40
years, I have been a scientist
in the professional and military
agencies that evaluate and
prepare for natural and manmade
biological threats, including
germ warfare and disease
outbreaks. Based on this
experience, I believe the threat
we are facing from this pathogen
is unique and of a high risk
status. In layman's terms, it
should be treated as an
emergency.
A diverse set of
researchers working on this
problem have contributed various
pieces of the puzzle, which
together presents the following
disturbing scenario:
Unique Physical Properties
This previously unknown organism
is only visible under an
electron microscope (36,000X),
with an approximate size range
equal to a medium size virus. It
is able to reproduce and appears
to be a micro-fungal-like
organism. If so, it would be the
first such micro-fungus ever
identified. There is strong
evidence that this infectious
agent promotes diseases of both
plants and mammals, which is
very rare.
Pathogen Location
and Concentration
It is
found in high concentrations in
Roundup Ready soybean meal and
corn, distillers meal,
fermentation feed products, pig
stomach contents, and pig and
cattle placentas.
Linked with
Outbreaks of Plant Disease
The
organism is prolific in plants
infected with two pervasive
diseases that are driving down
yields and farmer income-sudden
death syndrome (SDS) in soy, and
Goss' wilt in corn. The pathogen
is also found in the fungal
causative agent of SDS (Fusarium
solani fsp glycines).
Implicated in
Animal Reproductive Failure
Laboratory tests have confirmed
the presence of this organism in
a wide variety of livestock that
have experienced spontaneous
abortions and infertility.
Preliminary results from ongoing
research have also been able to
reproduce abortions in a
clinical setting.
The pathogen may
explain the escalating frequency
of infertility and spontaneous
abortions over the past few
years in US cattle, dairy,
swine, and horse operations.
These include recent reports of
infertility rates in dairy
heifers of over 20%, and
spontaneous abortions in cattle
as high as 45%.
For example, 450
of 1,000 pregnant heifers fed
wheatlege experienced
spontaneous abortions. Over the
same period, another 1,000
heifers from the same herd that
were raised on hay had no
abortions. High concentrations
of the pathogen were confirmed
on the wheatlege, which likely
had been under weed management
using glyphosate.
Recommendations
In summary, because of the high
titer of this new animal
pathogen in Roundup Ready crops,
and its association with plant
and animal diseases that are
reaching epidemic proportions,
we request USDA's participation
in a multi-agency investigation,
and an immediate moratorium on
the deregulation of RR crops
until the causal/predisposing
relationship with glyphosate
and/or RR plants can be ruled
out as a threat to crop and
animal production and human
health.
It is urgent to
examine whether the side-effects
of glyphosate use may have
facilitated the growth of this
pathogen, or allowed it to cause
greater harm to weakened plant
and animal hosts. It is
well-documented that glyphosate
promotes soil pathogens and is
already implicated with the
increase of more than 40 plant
diseases; it dismantles plant
defenses by chelating vital
nutrients; and it reduces the
bioavailability of nutrients in
feed, which in turn can cause
animal disorders. To properly
evaluate these factors, we
request access to the relevant
USDA data.
I have studied
plant pathogens for more than 50
years. We are now seeing an
unprecedented trend of
increasing plant and animal
diseases and disorders. This
pathogen may be instrumental to
understanding and solving this
problem. It deserves immediate
attention with significant
resources to avoid a general
collapse of our critical
agricultural infrastructure.
Sincerely,
COL (Ret.) Don M. Huber
Emeritus Professor, Purdue
University
APS Coordinator, USDA National
Plant Disease Recovery System
(NPDRS) |