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 Karen Kaplan, Genetically modified cotton stops one bug but fosters others;
 A Chinese crop designed to thrive without pesticides needs them again. Los
 Angeles Times, May 16, 2010.
 http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-sci-cotton-bugs-20100516,0,2796333.story
 ("in 1997 [] genetically modified cotton was approved for use in China. * *
 * Today, 95% of the cotton grown in China is genetically engineered")
 
 Note:
 (a) "A bollworm is a common term for any larva of a moth that attacks the
 fruiting bodies of certain crops, especially cotton": Wikiepdia.
 (b) mirid bug 盲蝽
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirid_bug
 
 I do not know if Taiwan has mirid bugs, but we do not have such a term 盲蝽.
 
 (c) National Agro-Technical Extension and Service Center 全国农业技术推广服
 务中心
 
 (d) A few days ago there was a similar report.
 
 Ian Sample, Scientists call for GM review after surge in pests around cotton
 farms in China; Farmland struck by infestations of bugs following
 widespread adoption of Bt cotton made by biotech giant Monsanto. Guardian,
 May 13, 2010.
 http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/may/13/gm-crops-pests-cotton-china
 
 There is no need to read the Guardian report, whose subtitle indicates the
 genetically modified cotton is from Monsanto.
 (e) China so far has not allowed genetically modified FOOD crops to grow
 commercially within its border.
 
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