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Killer Fugus in Florida

headband 707

Plant whisperer
Veteran
Killer Fungus in Florida?

By Dana Larsen - Monday, November 1 1999 Tag

Florida Drug Czar wants to unleash mutated pot-killing fungus
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Florida could become the first state to engage in biological warfare within its own borders, if Florida Drug Czar Jim McDonough gets his way.
McDonough is pushing hard for Florida to release genetically modified strains of a fungus called Fusarium oxysporum, generally known as a pest which blights tomatoes, peppers, flowers, corn, vines, and many other crops.
In late 1998, Florida Congressman Bill McCollum and Senator Bob Graham pushed through a $23 million appropriation for developing genetically modified "biological control agents" to eradicate marijuana and coca.
All of that money was supposed to be spent on overseas research, but now McDonough is trying to get some of the cash to use fusarium in his state. McDonough joined Governor Jeb Bush?s administration fresh from working with federal Drug Czar General McCaffrey.
Impossible to control
US Department of Agriculture scientists have been working to develop genetically modified strains of fusarium designed to target specific plants, like coca, poppy and marijuana. Head of the USDA?s Biocontrol of Plant Diseases is Dr Robert Lumsden at the University of Montana. Dr Lumsden has already developed a version of fusarium genetically enhanced to target coca plants. In 1995 it was tested on federal coca fields in Hawaii.
Yet despite fusarium?s popularity with some scientists, others consider it a danger. David Struhs, secretary of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, explained his concerns about the fungus in a letter to McDonough.
"Fusarium species are capable of evolving rapidly," wrote Struhs. "The fungus could mutate, spread and kill off everything from tomatoes to endangered plants. It is difficult, if not impossible, to control the spread of fusarium species."
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Yet despite their concerns, the Departments of Agriculture and Environmental Protection caved in and agreed to support initial fusarium tests, but only at quarantine labs in Gainesville.
Ironically, Florida has already been host to some of the worst biological disasters in the US. The state is over-run with Australian melaleuca trees and a Chinese vine called Kudzu, both imported by the state government long ago to help with other aspects of the environment.
Montana NORML lawsuit
In mid-August, Montana NORML filed suit against Montana State University, demanding release of all documents relating to the development of cannabis-killing fungi.
"What's particularly abhorrent about the cannabis-killing manufactured organism being created in a Montana laboratory," said Montana NORML Director John Masterson, "is the fact that the Montana House of Representatives just passed a pro-industrial hemp resolution."
? John Masterson of Montana NORML: tel (406) 542-8696.
Fusarium in use
The Miami Herald has reported on farmers in Peru who claim that US use of anti-coca fusarium fungus has led to the destruction of yucca, banana, tangerine and other crops. Peruvian campesinos have testified that in 1991 they saw DEA helicopters dropping fusarium pellets onto coca fields.
Fusarium is already being put to agricultural use, sold commercially under the brand names Biofox C and Fusaclean. In Africa, fusarium is being used to attack striga, a plant which chokes out wheat and sorghum. Less virulent strains of fusarium are also used to "innoculate" soil and plants against other more potentially harmful strains.
Of course, the ultimate consequences of spreading large quantities of this highly adaptable and virulent fungus into agricultural fields is unknown.
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? USDA Biocontrol of Plant Diseases Laboratory:
 
Fuuuuuuck,that's insane.Haven't we learned? How the hell do they think this fungus is gonna keep to killing just cannabis? Once a pathogen is out of the lab all bets are off....
 

rambone

Member
It's like John Holt said, "if you continue to burn up our herbs, we're going to burn down your cane fields."
 

Bowlsworth

New member
if these idiots cant figure out how to leagalize and tax cannabis how the hell can they think "biological warfare" is a good plan..

i guess i just answered myself...theyre idiots
 

supermanlives

Active member
Veteran
Fuuuuuuck,that's insane.Haven't we learned? How the hell do they think this fungus is gonna keep to killing just cannabis? Once a pathogen is out of the lab all bets are off....

i agree. it would be funny if it mutated and wiped out the citrus crops
 

CannaBunkerMan

Enormous Member
Veteran
This is asanine. There already IS a killer mold out there, it's called powdery mildew. Maybe there's an EPA employee out there that will try to patent it, now that the secret is out of the bag.

We need to start a war on "the war on drugs". How about a fungus that protects your grow from cops? Innoculate your setup, protect yourself!
 

headband 707

Plant whisperer
Veteran
The fact that this has even come up and been dropped on other counties shows how completely crazy these idiots are. This has really gone too far and anyone who thinks they didn't use these tactices really need to think again. To say I don't trust the gov would be an understatement and to say they have not done completely retarded things to gain whatever ground they think they are gaining here is also clear.There are some really insane ppl out there and stories like this show how insane they truly are. It matters not that this was 10 years ago or yesterday the thing that truly matters is they actually did this and let it come to pass at all. peace out Headband707
 
I

In~Plain~Site

A cursory scan of the internet yields no new info on the subject, other than this old article.

What exactly has you all riled up...this time :tiphat:



The fact that this has even come up and been dropped on other counties shows how completely crazy these idiots are. This has really gone too far and anyone who thinks they didn't use these tactices really need to think again. To say I don't trust the gov would be an understatement and to say they have not done completely retarded things to gain whatever ground they think they are gaining here is also clear.There are some really insane ppl out there and stories like this show how insane they truly are. It matters not that this was 10 years ago or yesterday the thing that truly matters is they actually did this and let it come to pass at all. peace out Headband707
 

Yes4Prop215

Active member
Veteran
It's like John Holt said, "if you continue to burn up our herbs, we're going to burn down your cane fields."

damn havnet heard that line in years!! this shit is absolutely fucking ridiculous...jeopardize legal crops like tomatos and sugar to eradicate marijuana....


these fucking cops and politicians are so braindead FUCK.....what ever happened to busting meth labs, underage prostitution, and cocaine traffickers??
 

BongRipkenJR.

Active member
these fucking cops and politicians are so braindead FUCK.....what ever happened to busting meth labs, underage prostitution, and cocaine traffickers??

Taking criminals down is dangerous and hard work. Taking down a pot head has to be easy. Most of us are very nice people and will just be upset while getting raided. They also usually find quite a bit of money so the raids pay for themselves. It sucks when the people in charge have no problem solving skills what so ever.
 
i was just reading something(i forget what, maybe jessie ventura) and it mentioned something along these lines to eradicate the poppies in the middle east.
 
G

Graham Purwatt

maybe thats whats wrong with my clones lately lol.thats crazy,if they do it it will have adverse effects on other plants for sure
 

mean mr.mustard

I Pass Satellites
Veteran
Devastating fungus isn't what food crops need right now.

If we don't pull their heads out of their asses for them we'll be starving as well as getting arrested for doing what our forefathers did.
 
Last edited:

bentom187

Active member
Veteran
i think their motivations are in the fact they get paid for this,either talk some sense into them wich is a waist of time, or F with their money ,either pay more than pharmo CO's or stop paying them and threaten to vote for somone with the opposite ideas,but dont acutally vote its a waist of time also.
 

headband 707

Plant whisperer
Veteran
A cursory scan of the internet yields no new info on the subject, other than this old article.

What exactly has you all riled up...this time :tiphat:


Fusarium

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Fusariumhttps://www.icmag.com/wiki/File:Fusarium_verticillioides_01.jpgFusarium verticillioidesScientific classificationKingdom:FungiSubkingdom:DikaryaPhylum:AscomycotaSubphylum:PezizomycotinaClass:SordariomycetesOrder:HypocrealesFamily:NectriaceaeGenus:Fusarium
Fusarium is a large genus of filamentous fungi widely distributed in soil and in association with plants. Most species are harmless saprobes, and are relatively abundant members of the soil microbial community. Some species produce mycotoxins in cereal crops that can affect human and animal health if they enter the food chain. The main toxins produced by these Fusarium species are fumonisins and trichothecenes.
The name of Fusarium comes from Latin fusus, meaning a spindle.



[edit] Pathogen

https://www.icmag.com/wiki/File:Fusarium_chlamydospores_160X.png
Fusarium chlamydospores


https://www.icmag.com/wiki/File:Fusarium_conidiophores_and_macroconidia_160X.png
Fusarium macroconidia


The genus includes a number of economically important plant pathogenic species.
Fusarium graminearum commonly infects barley if there is rain late in the season. It is of economic impact to the malting and brewing industries, as well as feed barley. Fusarium contamination in barley can result in head blight, and in extreme contaminations, the barley can appear pink.[1] The genome of this wheat and maize pathogen has been sequenced. F. graminearum can also cause root rot and seedling blight. The total losses in the US of barley and wheat crops between 1991 and 1996 have been estimated at $3 billion.[1]
Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. cubense is a fungal plant pathogen that causes Panama disease of banana (Musa spp.), also known as fusarium wilt of banana. Panama disease affects a wide range of banana cultivars, which are propagated asexually from offshoots and therefore have very little genetic diversity. Panama disease is one of the most destructive plant diseases of modern times, and caused the commercial disappearance of the once dominant Gros Michel cultivar. A more recent strain also affects the Cavendish cultivars used as a substitute for Gros Michel. It is considered inevitable that this susceptibility will spread globally and commercially wipe out the Cavendish cultivar, for which there are currently no acceptable replacements.
[edit] In humans

Some species may cause a range of opportunistic infections in humans. In humans with normal immune systems, fusarial infections may occur in the nails (onychomycosis) and in the cornea (keratomycosis or mycotic keratitis).[2] In humans whose immune systems are weakened in a particular way, (neutropenia, i.e., very low neutrophils count), aggressive fusarial infections penetrating the entire body and bloodstream (disseminated infections) may be caused by members of the Fusarium solani complex, Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium verticillioides, Fusarium proliferatum and, rarely, other fusarial species.[3]
[edit] Use as human food

Fusarium venenatum is produced industrially for use as a human food by Marlow Foods, Ltd., and is marketed under the name Quorn in Europe and North America.
[edit] Biological warfare

Mass casualties occurred in the Soviet Union in the 1930s and 1940s when Fusarium-contaminated wheat flour was baked into bread, causing alimentary toxic aleukia with a 60% mortality rate. Symptoms began with abdominal pain, diarrhea, vomiting, and prostration, and within days, fever, chills, myalgias and bone marrow depression with granulocytopenia and secondary sepsis occurred. Further symptoms included pharyngeal or laryngeal ulceration and diffuse bleeding into the skin (petechiae and ecchymoses), melena, bloody diarrhea, hematuria, hematemesis, epistaxis, vaginal bleeding, pancytopenia and gastrointestinal ulceration. Fusarium sporotrichoides contamination was found in affected grain in 1932, spurring research for medical purposes and for use in biological warfare. The active ingredient was found to be trichothecene T-2 mycotoxin, and it was produced in quantity and weaponized prior to the passage of the Biological Weapons Convention in 1972. The Soviets were accused of using the agent, dubbed "yellow rain", to cause 6,300 deaths in Laos, Kampuchea, and Afghanistan between 1975 and 1981.[4][5] The supposed biological warfare agent was later shown to be bee feces.[6][7]
Following an outbreak of Fusarium oxysporum that affected coca plantations in Peru, and other crops planted in the area, the United States has proposed the use of the agent as a mycoherbicide in drug eradication. In 2000, a proposal was passed to use the agent as part of Plan Colombia. In response to concerns use of the fungus could be perceived as biological warfare, the Clinton Administration "waived" this use of Fusarium. A subsequent law passed in 2006 has mandated the testing of mycoherbicide agents - either Fusarium oxysporum or Crivellia papaveracea - in field trials in U.S. territory.[8] Use of Fusarium oxysporum for these tests has raised concerns because resistant coca from the previous outbreak has been widely cultivated, and the fungus has been implicated in the birth of 31 anencephalic children in the Rio Grande region of Texas in 1991[citation needed], the loss of palm trees in Los Angeles, and eye infections from contact lens solutions.[9] The alternative Crivellia papaveracea is less well known; despite decades of study in the Soviet biowarfare lab in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, the relevant mycotoxins reportedly have not yet been isolated, named, or studied.[8]
 

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