Source: USA Today (US) Contact: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nfront.htm Copyright: 1998 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc. Author: Gary Fields, USA TODAY Pubdate: Thur, 22 Oct 1998 U.S. MIGHT ENLIST FUNGI IN DRUG WAR WASHINGTON - U.S. researchers are using genetic engineering to create strains of fungi that will destroy opium poppies and coca plants, Rep. Bill McCollum confirmed Wednesday. They'll receive $23 million to continue research as part of the $500 billion spending bill approved Wednesday in the Senate and signed by President Clinton. The vote was 65-29. McCollum, R-Fla., who co-wrote the Western Hemisphere Drug Elimination Act, said the research on the coca and poppy fungi is in the advanced stages. It is expected to be finished in about a year. ''This is something on the cusp of being successful,'' McCollum said. The two plants being targeted are processed into highly addictive drugs: Opium poppies into heroin and coca plants into cocaine. The money also will allow research to begin on a fungus that could be used to eliminate marijuana plants. If successful, the Department of Agriculture's research could dramatically alter eradication efforts. The fungi would kill plants and prevent new ones. Currently, anti-drug forces cut down plants and burn fields as one of the primary eradication methods. The United States would need permission from other countries to use the fungi, but McCollum said the concept has support from Bolivia, Colombia and Peru. X.B. Yang, a plant pathologist at Iowa State University who works on creating biological ways of controlling weeds, says certain fungi only attack specific plants. He says researchers look for the most aggressive, toxic fungi to attack menacing plants. They also seek fungi that can be reproduced industrially. ''It is definitely a silver bullet in the drug war,'' he says. Researchers are concerned, however, that land treated with the fungi would be poisoned. Charles Mazza, a horticulturist at Cornell University, says research projects such as the eradication project take years. If a project is rushed, ''all kinds of things can happen.'' ''One year a fungus might be promising, and the next year it might leap over into a corn field. That's why you do research for years. It has to be tested every step of the way.'' - --- Checked-by: Don Beck