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Genetic Engineering for Food Supply

Genetic Engineering for Food Supply. Suzanne Distrola. What is genetic engineering?. Genetic makeup of cells is changed. To produce new organisms, the genes are moved from one species to another. Who. [full orange] The five countries producing more than 95% of commercialized GMO

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Genetic Engineering for Food Supply

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  1. Genetic Engineering for Food Supply Suzanne Distrola

  2. What is genetic engineering? • Genetic makeup of cells is changed. • To produce new organisms, the genes are moved from one species to another.

  3. Who [full orange]The five countries producing more than 95% of commercialized GMO [legend pattern orange] Other country producing commercialized GMO. [orange dot]Only experimental crops.

  4. Why • Benefits • Enhance a species • Convenience

  5. Beneficial • BP1: Farmers • Financially • Efficiently • BP2: Replenishes food supply • BP3: Wider variety of food

  6. Thesis • Genetic engineering is beneficial because it helps farmers in different ways, even financially, increases the amount of food and creates a wider variety of food.

  7. Food supply • Most grown foods are genetically altered in some way • Climate tolerance • Pets repellants • Physical changes

  8. GM and Farmers • Saves them money. • Gain profit • Higher yield=greater profit • Larger amounts of produce are surviving. • GM seeds • Natural pesticides.

  9. GM seeds • Toleration to environment • Produce natural pesticides • Inherit and pass on modified genes • Physical traits

  10. No need for sprays • Farmers no longer need to spray crops. • Can be toxic • Harmful to environment • Consumers do not want to eat food that has been treated with pesticides because of potential health hazards.

  11. Replenishes food supply • Greater yield • Larger produce • More surviving • GM solves spoiling issue

  12. Greater selection • GM foods increased the variety and preference • Seedless watermelon • Consumer convenience • Consumer preference

  13. Consumer convenience • Japanese farmers have forced their watermelons to grow in a square shape by inserting the melons in a square, tempered glass case while the fruit is still growing on the vine • Seedless watermelons

  14. Conclusion

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