Pubdate: Wed, 28 July 1999 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Media Group 1999 Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ Author: Julian Borger, in Washington POT-EATING FUNGUS RAISES MUTATION FEARS Florida environmentalists voiced their anxiety yesterday about government plans to start testing a new marijuana-eating fungus as a possible weapon against the drug plantations hidden among the state's famous swamps. The fungus, Fusarium oxysporum, was cultivated in the laboratories of a Montana bio-engineering firm, and is designed to attack marijuana while leaving other plants untouched. But ecologists are concerned that it might mutate if sprayed on the fertile wetlands. Florida's newly appointed "drug tsar", Jim McDonough, stressed that no decision had been taken so far to use the fungus, but expressed optimism that it would pass safety tests. "Is it safe and does it work? I've heard some of the top scientists in the country say 'Yes'," Mr McDonough said. But Florida's environmental protection secretary, David Struhs, wrote to Mr McDonough warning him of the dangers of the pot-killing fungus. "Fusarium species are capable of evolving rapidly," he wrote. "Mutagenicity [the tendency to mutate] is by far the most disturbing factor in attempting to use a Fusarium species as a bio-herbicide." Mr Struhs said controlling the species was "difficult if not impossible" in Florida's hothouse climate, and it could lead to disease in crops like tomatoes, peppers and corn. In the past Florida's drug-busters have braved alligators and snakes by wading through the swamps because marijuana growers often make their plantations impossible to spot from the air by sowing them among corn and tomato vines. Last year the state managed to destroy more than 55,000 plants with a street value of $55m (pounds 35m). But the authorities believe that that represents a small percentage of the total annual crop, and there is pressure from the state's mainly Republican politicians to find new weapons. The US has spent $14m researching biological-weapons which could be used against poppy, coca and marijuana plants, but the findings are shrouded in secrecy. US officials denied recent accusations by Peruvian farmers that the Drug Enforcement Administration used a fungus to destroy coca plants in the war against cocaine. The farmers said the fungus had spread to banana, tangerine and other food crops. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea