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Date: | Sat, 15 Jul 2017 15:57:25 +0000 |
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Randy: There is no inherent difference between a crop bred for virus or fungus resistance, or lower phytotoxin levels, or higher vitamin content by precision genetic engineering than one bred by hit-or-miss mutation and/or hybridization.
--One of the solutions is the selection of resistant cultivars, which could take many years to select, improve, and develop. A shortcut would be precision breeding--splicing in a gene from another plant to confer resistance. But then those trees and shrubs would be producing GMO honey, according to some interpretations
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See my earlier post on so-called "precision breeding". It is hit-or-miss splicing into the genome, instead of hit-or-miss natural mutation, and it is much more dramatic at the genomic level. That has consequences, some of which we are only beginning to recognize. This short-cut--"precision breeding"--is like driving across an old mine field in order to save yourself a few miles driving around it.
Christina
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