-- this time of year I have a table set up just outside the kitchen door (and also just outside my office window) for hardening off transplants as preliminary to moving them from the light shelves in kitchen to the greenhouse; right now there are no transplants on it, but there is a white and yellow cat taking shelter underneath it. Time to go let him in, probably
... I have to say that that was a
much more fascinating read
before I realized that you're referring to
plant transplants ...
I do see a major difference between conventional breeding over time and directly engineered organisms. At least conventional breeding gives the general ecology more time to adapt to changes.
I'ld even go so far as to say that the
really decisive difference is that with the industrial farming of today, the speed of "rolling out" new genetics, from an experiment deemed concluded successfully to huge monocultures mostly replacing the predecessors, has picked up. (That means that any shortcoming you didn't find out before threatens to catch your attention by affecting a sizeable part of the world(wide agriculture). A hypothetical "going on a others'-genetics-override extinction rampage as soon as it hits the wild" scenario wouldn't care much about the size of the initial release, short of introduction being done on a continent-by-continent-and-wait-for-dropping-shoes-in-between manner.) Needless to say, making it the SOP to buy seeds from
one central source
every year promises to make future roll-outs still faster
and opens up the possibility of "little updates" being done without anyone but the supplier knowing.(Yes, I had another "minor" maintenance window last Friday eve whose unexpected side effects will keep me busy for quite a while, how'd you know ... ?)
On the other hand, once both the fields and the combined "patented seeds and protective agents therefor" markets have been monopolized enough, wannabe competitor's best bet to overcome the market entry barriers changes from "make a better product" to "secretly make and release plant diseases targeting the monopoly's uniform products". Let's see whether
that's enough to make monocultures go out of fashion again ...