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Genetically Modified Crops

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Genetically Modified Crops
Genetically Modified Crops Genetically modified food and agricultural biotechnology have generated a lot of interest and controversy in the United States worldwide. Some like the technology 's benefits while others raise questions about environmental and food safety issues. Crop varieties developed by genetic engineering were first introduced for commercial production in 1996. Today, these crops are planted on more than 167 million acres worldwide. U.S. farmers are by far the largest producers of genetically modified (GM) crops (6)(8). Genetically Modified Crops are foods that have had a gene extracted from a living thing, which has been placed into a different food by a scientist. This technology can be used to produce new varieties of plants or animals more quickly than conventional breeding methods. Also to introduce traits not possible through traditional techniques. There are two main types of GM crops that are in commercial use around the world. These are either crops that have been developed to be resistant to certain crop pests, or crops that have been developed to be resistant to a particular herbicide (weed killer)(5).
Genetically Modified Crops are made for many different purposes, the main purpose being to create a food able to survive being sprayed with harmful chemicals like pesticides and herbicides. Other purposes are to make food stay fresher for longer, to kill pests, to produce more of the crop and to experiment with taste and quality. The most common foods are maize, cotton, tomatoes, potatoes, corn, canola, soybean and sugar beet(6). Gene Technology is one of the types of modern Biotechnology. It is the use of living things to make or change products, such as the foods we eat (Melcer2). The first genetically modified crops to be sold in the USA were tomatoes, which were modified so they wouldn 't go soft so quickly, then soy beans and oilseed rape, which gives margarine and oils. They were modified to survive certain herbicides and



Bibliography: 1.) Ambrose, Sue Goetinck. Genetic crops are feared but traditional breeding presents risks of its own. Dallas Morning News. 8 April 2000 2.) Melcer, Rachael.Scientist group calls tighter oversight of "biopharming" genetic crops. St. Louis Post-Dispatch(MO). 16 Dec. 2004 3.) Quick, Susanne and Groshong, Kimm. Genetic crops could decimate wild populations, researchers say. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, The (WI). 24 July 2003 4.) http://www.defra.gov.uk/environment/gm/crops/faq.htm 5.)http://www.direct.gov.uk/Topics/HomeAndCommunity/Householders/LocalEnvironment/GreenIssues/GreenIssuesArticle/fs/en?CONTENT_ID=4018207&chk=3A5Njv 6.) http://www.geocities.com/gm_crops/questions.html 7.) http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/elsi/gmfood.shtml 8.) http://pewagbiotech.org/resources/factsheets/display.php3?FactsheetID=2

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