In India, the pink bollworm caterpillar quickly evolved resistance to genetically modified cotton, but not in the southwestern US where a coordinated resistance management programme has been in place since the biotech crop was introduced in 1996, researchers said.
Analysing data from 77 studies of 13 pest species in eight countries on five continents, the researchers found well-documented cases of field-evolved resistance to Bt crops in five major pests as of 2010, compared with only one such case in 2005.
Genetically modified corn and cotton produce insecticidal proteins from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis, or Bt for short. Bt proteins kill devastating pests but are considered environmentally friendly and harmless to people.
However, some scientists feared that widespread use of these proteins in genetically modified crops would spur rapid evolution of resistance in pests.
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Carriere explained that conditions are most favourable if resistance genes are initially rare in pest populations; inheritance of resistance is recessive - meaning insects survive on Bt plants only if have two copies of a resistance gene, one from each parent - and abundant refuges are present.
Refuges consist of standard, non-Bt plants that pests can eat without ingesting Bt toxins.
"Computer models showed that refuges should be especially good for delaying resistance when inheritance of resistance in the pest is recessive," explained Carriere.
"Perhaps the most compelling evidence that refuges work comes from the pink bollworm, which evolved resistance rapidly to Bt cotton in India, but not in the US. Same pest, same crop, same Bt protein, but very different outcomes," said Bruce Tabashnik, also from the University of Arizona.
He explained that in the southwestern US, an effective refuge strategy was implemented by scientists and growers.