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Abstract
A sustainable strategy to nourish the planet and
its people must also promote biodiversity conservation.
This strategy will have to include reduction
in land degradation and unsustainable overuse of
fertilisers, pesticides, fungicides, herbicides, and
irrigation water. A case can be made for conserving
biodiversity as a source of traits for
incorporation, by different genetic tools, into food
plants and animals, but an even stronger case
can be made for a conserved biodiversity to
supply ecosystem services that will nourish the
planet and its occupants into the future. Biodiversity
is under severe threat from many angles. One
of the best ways to promote biodiversity is to
preserve native habitats. By maintaining or even
increasing yields on existing land, biotechnology
crops can help to minimise expansion of agriculture
into natural areas. It has also been estimated
that agricultural biotechnology has changed
pesticide spraying so as to greatly reduce greenhouse
gas emissions and decrease environmental
impacts of insecticides and herbicides. Gene flow
from cultivated, including biotechnology-based,
crops to and from wild plants is known to occur.
The consequences of this flow vary from species
to species, but as a general rule, do not pose a
significant threat to biodiversity.