ABSTRACT

Bioengineering offers many opportunities for forestry. Bioengineered trees can produce more valuable wood, help reclaim contaminated land, improve the health of urban trees, and facilitate pest management. But the ecological risks are complex, and public views about the ethical acceptability of genetic engineering vary widely. Unique in its breadth and diversity, The Bioengineered Forest begins with a survey of the range of forestry practices for which the use of biotechnologies might be appropriate. Scholars representing diverse academic perspectives and viewpoints examine in depth the economic and environmental rationale for forest biotechnologies and the current state of technology with respect to gene performance and safety. They consider the contemporary political and economic environment in which bioengineering is being introduced and where the 'genomic revolution' might take forestry and genetic engineering in the future. The Bioengineered Forest presents compelling arguments in favor of genetic engineering. Just as powerfully, it examines the significant technical and legal hurdles involved in genetic engineering, the undesirable environmental and social consequences that might result from its misapplication, and the risks for businesses that are looking too exclusively for near-term benefits.

part 1|97 pages

Economic and Technological Choices

chapter 1|9 pages

Future Forests

Environmental and Social Contexts for Forest Biotechnologies

chapter 5|24 pages

Exotic Pines and Eucalypts

Perspectives on Risks of Transgenic Plantations

chapter 6|22 pages

Tree Biotechnology in the Twenty-First Century

Transforming Trees in the Light of Comparative Genomics

part 2|129 pages

Ethical, Social, and Ecological Caveats

chapter 10|18 pages

Have You Got a License for That Tree?

(And Can You Afford to Use It?)

chapter 11|9 pages

Invasiveness of Transgenic versus Exotic Plant Species

How Useful Is the Analogy?

chapter 13|20 pages

Transgenic Resistance in Short-Rotation Plantation Trees

Benefits, Risks, Integration with Multiple Tactics, and the Need to Balance the Scales