Genetically-Modified Everything 495
BreadMan writes "The Economist has an interesting article about how the use of GM (genetically modified) plants extends well beyond the food industry. Altered trees that make better paper, insect-resistant cotton, potatoes that contain the right kinds of starches. An interesting read to see where the industry is going in light of problems with having GM foods on the dinner table. There's more industrial uses for agricultural products than you'd think of right away, so this may be a lucrative use for GM technology."
GM has been done for thousands of years. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:GM has been done for thousands of years. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:GM has been done for thousands of years. (Score:5, Insightful)
True, yet functionally meaningless.
Re:GM has been done for thousands of years. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:GM has been done for thousands of years. (Score:3, Insightful)
Better, cheaper paper (Score:2, Insightful)
You misspelt 'hemp'
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:2, Insightful)
Wonder what would happen if the GMO-hemp industry grows big -- would those genes dilute the pot to the point that this may be the final victory in the war on drugs?
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:3, Informative)
Hemp and Marijuana belong to the same species of plant, but just like there are several different types of Oak and Maple, there's a distinction between Hemp and Pot.
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What was that you said? (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, this is a concern not only for GM crops, but for regular corn and soybean hybrids that are based upon a narrow genetic diversity.
Re:What was that you said? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:2)
One guess might be that it's easier to let trees grow on their own, instead of having a lab pump energy into a vat to grow the cellulose.
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:5, Insightful)
Yup. Just like grapes.
-Peter
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:5, Informative)
Hemp has many industrial uses for the oils and high strength fibers. It also contains such trivial amounts of the psychoactive chemical THC that nobody could possibly get high off of it. Thje saying goes that trying to get stoned on hemp is like trying to get drunk on non-alcoholic beer.
It also contains higher concentrations of a chemical called cannabidiol (CBD), which actually counters the effects of THC... so smoking industrial hemp would more likely get you UN-stoned (and deathly ill, I'd imagine).
Hemp can be used to make anything that's currently made of cotton or wood, perhaps of lower quality but certaintly of lower cost.
Marijuana, on the other hand, has no commercial value other than as a drug (illegal or otherwise).
=Smidge=
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:3, Interesting)
It works both ways. If some enterprising individual were to leave a SINGLE mature male marijuana plant in a field of hemp, every single seed resulting from that pollen would be a marijuana seed, not hemp.
In fact, trends on the overgrow forums, etc already show some people are doing this. Among stoners, naturally growing hemp (what Jefferson called Indian Hemp plant) has been nicknamed "ditchweed" because you often find
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually hemp makes great paper. It's cheaper and uses less chemicals than paper made from wood. Don't think our friends at Dow Chemical didn't know this when they lobbied to make marijuana illegal.
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:3, Interesting)
Put some hops in a little pillow and sleep on it for a solid night's sleep. Hops is useful for insomnia. But don't handle it excessively, as it can cause contact dermatitus.
Re:Better, cheaper paper (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps with large capital investment in new p
GM plants... (Score:5, Funny)
Uh, potatoes=food (Score:2)
I realise that you can also fire them from potato cannons, but I'm fairly certain they still count (overall) as food.
Killer App: Pets (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:3, Funny)
I don't know about pets that literally remain puppies or kittens, though. They need to grow up a little to be trained.
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:2)
Also, they're prehensile trunks can handle a toilet brush, so you know how they'll earn their hay and peanuts.
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:2, Insightful)
First, lets alter genetics to eliminate the source of greed that drives everyone to fuck with everything they can. Maybe I'm the only one, but sometimes I think things are getting out of hand.
there wouldn't be worries about the altered genes entering the natural ecosystem because of the sterility.
And Microsoft produces bug-free code. No amount of engineering can produce "worry-free" systems.
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:2)
That's #1 on my list of scientific advances I want to see. Cute fluffy permakittens.
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:5, Interesting)
Interestingly enough, this also might stop some of the hunting for great cats in the wild. Why risk jail time when you can just breed and skin housecats? In the long run, it would also help destroy the appeal of rare furs, as if people live with the animals, I think they emphasize with them to a greater extent. (for example, most people would think you were psychotic if you tried to sell them a dog skin coat. Is is because dog hair makes bad coats, or because they like dogs and would feel revulsion to the idea as a result?)
Your idea of GM kittens and puppies also has a major plus. By making them puberty-free, they are already fixed, reducing the problem of unwanted breeding and stray animals.
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:5, Informative)
Actually you can already get pets like this through traditional breeding. There's a wild cat species called the Serval, which is considerably larger (and smarter) than a house cat but much smaller than the big cats. In the last few years, they have successfully bred Servals with housecats to produce what they call a Savannah cat. The Savannah cats are much larger and smarter than a housecat, have a leopoard-like fur pattern, and several other very exotic characteristics. IMHO they're a gorgeous animal and are supposed to make great pets (if you can proof your home/yard to an animal with the curiousity of a cat coupled with greatly increased intelligence and size
There's also a fairly recent hybrid between housecats and another wild cat species, but I can't remember what it's called, a small relative of the leopard I think.
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:3, Funny)
Well fook you! I want diamond claws!
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:5, Funny)
(so lonely
Fah. Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:5, Funny)
Fah.
50 weeks out of the year they'll scratch you silly if you try to make a move on them, and when they *are* in heat you end up burned out and drooling while they go wandering around the neighborhood, yowling in frustration and dropping thong for anything with a Y chromosome.
Cleaning? Cooking?
Yeah, right.
Clean themselves, maybe, but you know who is going to be scraping the hair balls off the carpet, right?
And the way they run to your side and stare at you like you're God when you use the can opener, that's cute and gratifying at first, but after a few times you realize they're actually in awe of the can opener.
Re:Fah. Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:3, Funny)
YACK, Never put to your p0rn collection online!
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:3, Informative)
Some anthopologists speculate that the cats hung around the graineries, because that's where the rodents were. Gradually people and cats got used to each other. I, for one, don't think cats are particularly domesticated.
Re:Killer App: Pets (Score:2)
Would you abort a child that broke this guarantee?
It's a good thing (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's a good thing (Score:2)
Re:It's a good thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Volkswagon TDI engines can use thier canola based diesel ("bio-diesel") or cooking oil. The main consequence is that your exhaust smells either french fries or popcorn.
We have the solutions to many of our problems, humanity just can't be bothered to save itself.
Re:Canola is/was a brand (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's a good thing (Score:2)
Stated more provocatively, would you make a smart dog by mating with one?
Problem with GM. (Score:3, Insightful)
A prev. poster likened this to open source and closed source and in this regard he is completely right (though it was modded funny rather than insightful) but it is worse than closed source software because it is aimed at replacing vital commodities with intellectual property rights.
Sure, but guess what the 1st use was... (Score:3, Insightful)
Not only that, but they then have the temerity to go and prosecute people who's fields have been contaminated by their products for patent infringement. They should be made responsible for clearing up gene flow. After all the bloody stuff is now immune to the conventional herbicides.
Re:It's a good thing (Score:2)
You are correct it will not be promoted. That is being saved for the fuel cell fa
The side ones will be profitable (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm scared to ask (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I'm scared to ask (Score:2)
There is a reason why it is called white meat.
Re:The side ones will be profitable (Score:2, Insightful)
Your story makes absolutely no sense (why again were you splicing the genes of a daffodil with that of algae) and why was a beer maker doing GM work on chickens in the early 80's.
Nice try though. I'm sure you'll get up to about +4 Interesting until some mods actually ready your little tale.
Re:The side ones will be profitable (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The side ones will be profitable (Score:2)
And how the hell does Hooters serve chicken wings that are the size of turkey wings anyway? They seem to be 30% larger than the chicken wings you get at a pub.
IMO, Genetic modification (and steroid use too) has gotten out o
Re:The side ones will be profitable (Score:3, Informative)
Well, I grew up in farming country and have worked the farms, but that was in the 60's. while I am aware of the commercial chicken farms, I have never been to one (nor desire to be there).
Keep in mind, that this was an extra item added to checken feed. The chicken itself was not GM. Now, if that checken that you buy is slightly pink, then be assuered that either the algae or the daffidils were fed to the chicken. Dead Drained Chicken is pasty white.
Modifying everything to suit us? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Modifying everything to suit us? (Score:2, Insightful)
Then it wouldn't matter. We'd all be dead and it wouldn't be our problem.
Re:Modifying everything to suit us? (Score:2)
Re:Modifying everything to suit us? (Score:3, Insightful)
The main difference is that before now we had to work through the API that life gave us (reproduction), but now we can get right at the code (modifying genes). Of course, this also gives us the ability to completely fuck the system up a lot quicker than before, too.
At Last! Caffeinated EVERYTHING!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Hooray for modern medicine!
Re:At Last! Caffeinated EVERYTHING!!! (Score:2, Funny)
morning.
Re:At Last! Caffeinated EVERYTHING!!! (Score:2)
Re:At Last! Caffeinated EVERYTHING!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Don't screw with things you don't understand (Score:5, Interesting)
Some GM stuff in labs can perhaps be controlled, but once modified geness are released into the RealWorld they are very difficult to control. The risk of doing bad things is great. We already see the effects of cross contamination of crops etc.
If this goes more widespread (eg. GM trees for paper production) we can expect weird things happening (eg. say we remove some substance from trees to make them easier to process but that gene provides disease resistance etc. If that crosses into wild populations then we end up with sick forests etc).
Agriculture and food production are regulated and controlled (well to a degree anyway), industrial stuff less so. It concerns me that all the GM bads we see in agriculture will be far worse in the industrial sector.
Re:Don't screw with things you don't understand (Score:2)
Genes generally don't just "cross" into wild populations, so if the GM trees have unforeseen problems it won't affect any natural forests.
In the more general case, yes of course there is a lot of room for screw-ups with GM plants but there is also a staggering potential for good, just like any new technology.
Re:Don't screw with things you don't understand (Score:4, Interesting)
Sooo, killer bees don't exist then? This incident alone should make us be weary...
Oooo, the sky is falling (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not religious, so I'm not saying "Don't play God", but it is the height of arrogance for scientists to say they understand genetics sufficiently to control GM. Some GM stuff in labs can perhaps be controlled, but once modified geness are released into the RealWorld they are very difficult to control. The risk of doing bad things is great. We already see the effects of cross contamination of crops etc.
Funny how you say that they don'
Re:Oooo, the sky is falling (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not saying that people are acting in bad faith or that we should kill research. What I am concerned with is the "trust me, I'm a scientist" attitude that you are promoting. Even when applying the best knowledge at the time, people make mistakes. Some mistakes are easy to reverse and some are not. The scientists of the day construct models and work to those models. The scientists of tomorrow will debunk those theories and models and make new ones.
Studies showed Thalidamide (sp?) was OK. Doctors prescribed it because it was a very useful drug. Suddenly deformed people started being born.
Thirty years ago the flavour of the day treatment for a variety of many mental illnesses was shock therapy. It is now frowned upon. The people applying it were not witchdoctors or alternative healers, they were the scientists of the day.
The dumb-ass that brought possums and rabbits to NZ or snakes to that pacific island (some US base, I forget which)did it with the best of intentions. Now those animals cause havoc because there are no natural preditors.
All the scientists involved did this as their life's work. They understood the science of the day and acted accordingly. They still made the wrong actions though.
GM can perhaps be controlled in the lab, but remember that pollen is genetic material and some pollen can travel thousands of miles to contaminate other crops. Once the genie is out of the bottle it is impossible to control.
Likening GM to GPL is really stupid. Humans have control over GPL, but they don't have control over genetic material once it is released into the wild.
Seriously. (Score:3, Interesting)
I understand that it is easy to just write off these concerns as just more wacko technophobe hysteria, but look at how many problems we have created just by introducing non-native species into other habitats. These aren't genetically modified, or in many cases even bred by humans for specific traits. They are perfectly natural organisms that simply evolved in different places. And yet they have reeked havoc in their new habitat because the
Danger! (Score:5, Insightful)
This did not used to be so bad. But today the shortsightedness, or rather the self centeredness of the modern executive can be very dangerous to the publics health and the publics wallet.
Re:Danger! (Score:3, Insightful)
If you really want to blame someone for pollution, nuclear disasters and destruction, and secret research projects, start with the government. Oh wait, you can't blame them: they have immunity!
One of these days... (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm not against GM products, on the contrary. As population pressures grow in a seemingly exponential way we are going to need these things to survive. The planet can only do so much on its own.
But it's bound to hap
Penn & Teller Bullshit (Score:4, Informative)
Basically, the show says that the people against genetically modified food don't know the facts and say that it isn't monitored by government agencies, while it is infact monitored by the FDA and EPA. Furthermore, genetically modified foods are solving the problem of world hunger by producing more output per area and being more resilliant in harsh climates.
Personally, I believe genetically modified plants are required to sustain life on earth with our current population.
The holy grail is HYDROGEN production (Score:3, Insightful)
Forget about designer fruit...
There are bacteria that can generate small amounts of hydrogen gas. If genetic engineering can make these bacteria much better at this function, we will have very good renewable energy source.
Re:The holy grail is HYDROGEN production (Score:5, Insightful)
Hydrogen is a very poor source of energy - it's energy density is very low. (it takes 1/3 of the available energy in the hydrogen just to compress it to a liquid!) It's explosive. It's very inefficient.
Better to consider alge that produces bio-diesel [unh.edu] - much denser, more compact, no expensive compression, no equipment retrofitting... the list of benefits goes on and on....
Re:The holy grail is HYDROGEN production (Score:3, Interesting)
Onsite hydrogen generation could conceivably allow for extremely clean/efficient power plants, running directly on hydrogen and producing water as a byproduct, either at a large scale or even at the individual scale, depending on the amount of support structure necessary.
For that matter, depending on how much bacteria it takes to generat
GM plants would be great, except ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Monsanto's GM canola has also crossbred with Canadian canola strains, making it impossible for Canadian farmers to guarentee that their canola crops are GM free, thus locking them out of the EU markets. Now, they want to do the same thing with wheat. [bbc.co.uk]
Leaving aside the fears and marketability problems surrounding GM plants, we still have the problem that patented plants are a huge threat to farmers. You can get in big, expensive trouble if you didn't license the genes that are growing in your field, even if you didn't plant them. If you save your own seed, and that seed gets contaminated by someone's patented, GM genes, you could loose a lifetime of work.
Re:GM plants would be great, except ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:GM plants would be great, except ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep. Until we get the patent laws fixed, GM plants carry that very real threat. It's not the plant's fault, and not the fault of the techniques which created it, but the threat is no less real for all that, and it definitely goes with the plant..
I'm waiting for... (Score:2)
I'm waiting for the GM soy product that tastes as good as my Big Mac I had for lunch and is still healthy...that would be awesome.
End of the drug war (Score:3, Funny)
Frankenfood (Score:2)
I'm all for genetically engineered foods if it's for the right reasons. What we really don't need is the next high fructose corn syrup or partially hydroginated vegitable oil. What's wrong with the starches that occur naturally in potatos? I mean, if you can avoid the use of pesticides in growing insect resistant potatos using GE, that's great. But the best kinds of starches?!
GM Chicken possibilities (Score:2)
Combine that with genes for better feathers, and we'll also get fluffier pillows!
And meatier chicken feet... hmmm hmmm
Re:GM Chicken possibilities (Score:2)
http://www.penny-arcade.com/view.php3?date=2002-0
We've been GMing for 1,000s of Years (Score:3, Interesting)
Dog breeds have been around for a long time as well.
The only difference between what the Aztecs did and what scientists do is whether or not you access the genes directly or through the natural "API" (aka breeding, Java programmers no doubt hate GM food).
(Waits for jokes about kernel size.)
ethics of genetically modifying humans (Score:2)
Questions about genetic modification (Score:2)
Can anybody tell me (in a semester or less :-) why either of those two problems are different than the results of traditional breeding and cross-pollination?
Before I get shouted down as flamebait, let me hint that it's possible to breed plants that are more
What ARE the problems with GM foods? (Score:2)
The urge to improve on what we've been given in life is an incredibly strong human trait, and it's one of the things I most admire about us as a species. So I am disinclined to listen to this almost religious hatred of the idea.
GM foods seem like excellent ways to make food more abundent and cost-effect
problems (Score:2)
problems indeed...
All overreactions.
All unproven.
All irrelevant given the older style GM organisms such common corn, wheat, grapefruit, etc.
Basically, thousands of people starve because of technocrats & self-righteous bureaucrats.
scandalous...
Poll (Score:2)
Where's the CowboyNeal option?
NUCLEAR WEAPONS: ALSO VERY USEFUL (Score:2, Insightful)
Create lakes,
Create 100% radioactive test envioronments
Observe radiated species mutations
Study human health.
Nukes are REALLY USEFUL THINGS. Industry's just chomping at the bit, looking for ways to make money off of em, too.
And just to get your children's thoughts rolling with the possibilities, we [of slashdot staff] will be hyping the uses of nuclear landscapes [for free].
Socially irresponsible? Inconsiderate? NOT AT ALL! We'll test it out in miniature scale, first, by giving sticks
Anyone who has eaten corn... (Score:2)
Has eaten genetically modified food. Maize itself has been cultivated by man over the past thousand years from a grass-like grain with ears a few inches long to the foot-plus long ears we have today.
GM by itself is not harmful when exercised with care and due diligence. But, much like any other technology, those who value profit above public safety will find a way to use GM to line their pockets at the expense of the public.
Until we thoroughly understand GM and its implications, we'd do well to regu
Kind of exaggerated, with respect to paper (Score:4, Interesting)
How is it on its way? Because some guys are researching it?
Now the I can't speak for the entire world, but I live in Sweden, I know a lot of people in the paper industry, and I've personally spoken with people belonging to senior management of several scandinavian paper companies.
And they all said the same thing: They currently have no interest whatsoever in GMO trees. They're not researching for it, they don't want it. The are interested in biotech, but only to the extent that it can give them insight into how to do traditional forestry better.
Why trust them? Well, the reasoning behind this is that this industry has been harshly critizied by environmentalists for a long time. Today, they've pretty much 'cleaned up their act' (in scandinavia), aiming for FSC [fsc.org] acreditation and so on.
They are not about to throw all that work away.
That said.. I'm personally positive to biotech, and I think that we might very well see GMO trees out there. But not in ten years time. Not in the nordic countries anyway.
serious issues (Score:3, Interesting)
GM "products" should be engineered to be sterile . . . it's not that hard to craft a triploid strain, or knock out a fertility factor. The crops are still clonable by traditional agriculture methods . . . but don't breed to make hybrids.
That, or we should be able to sue a company into oblivion for contaminating a nations agricultural products. Contaminating a nations food source, is bio-terrorism, and should be handled as such.
luckilly $$$ will keep broski off the backs of these corporations, and in the library watching what I read.
GM food is great, except... (Score:3, Informative)
--
The genes will get loose... (Score:3, Interesting)
There is one certainty in all of this: the genes spliced into GMOs will get loose in the world due to inter-breeding with non-GM organisms of the same species. This is as certain as losing in Vegas.
So how does this sound: I propose to release novel self-replicating entities into your environment, and I don't know what the consequences will be. I can be almost certain they won't lead to the end of the world as we know it, but on the other hand it isn't a great strech to imagine that my self-replicating entities are going to have a significant effect on the ecosystem you live in and depend upon.
Personally, I'd be very unhappy with someone making this proposal, and the comparisions that come to mind with existing activities, such as selective breeding for domestication, don't really hold water because a) the whole point of GMOs is that they contain genetic combinations that would not occur in nature and b) selective breeding for domestication has already been responsible for major environmental changes.
Domestic species both force out non-domestic ones (as happened with prairie grasses) and due to increased genetic homogeneity may also be more susceptible to disease. So comparing the GMO process to domestication is not entirely reassuring.
"Industrial biology" has been extremely good for us humans in the past hundred-odd years. We can feed ourselves, worldwide, better than at any time in history. But there have been costs, and I'd like to see a really compelling case made for adding to those costs with GMOs.
So far, that case has not been made, and many GMO proponents simply deny that there are going to be costs. Only when they admit to that will there be a meaningful debate. Of course, for that to happen, the "GMOs are the work of Satan" mantra from the other side would have to fall silent as well.
The only problem with this... (Score:3, Informative)
There was already a case where Monsanto was growing plants across the road from a farmer and the farmer had to pay Monsanto thousands of dollars because their seeds blew over into his planting area. Seems to me that Monsanto should have been sued for polluting the farmer's planting area. Or to put that another way - GM plants should be treated like toxic waste sites. If the toxic waste contaminates the area around the site - it is the responsibility of the owner of the site to clean up their mess. Not the other way around.
GM biotech today = closed source. Big problems... (Score:3, Interesting)
Its analogous to proprietary software: you can't just buy the algorithm: you have to buy the whole package (and support and perhaps hardware too). In much of current GM technology you can't just buy the nifty new gene, you have to buy the whole potato (w/a limited selection of potato types if any choice at all) *and* you're just leasing the potato *and* you have to keep buying the upgrades each year.
Problems with the closed-source methods of GM tech include:
The problem with GM (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:GM plants and patent enforcement (Score:3, Insightful)
Please tell me this was a joke.
We on this planet really know so little about genetic crap...
Well, no, **YOU** really know so little.
Sadly, the case with GM is that it will be prevented by the hysterical uninformed and fearful ignorant masses. Just the same as with energy. We could have a world of efficient and modern nuclear power, but, no, everyone, even the supposed smart geek set, has to sit in their caves and wail at the moon and not open their eyes.
You
Re:GM plants and patent enforcement (Score:3, Interesting)
What I am calling for is better controls over the damage, forseeable and unforseeable alike. Further, if there is more responsibility and liability placed on the shoulders of the decision-makers, then controls and responsible application are more likely to occur. As things stand now, we have a corporate culture that lacks morality and conscience. Those values need to be reconnected into our culture before
Re:The dangers ofGM Plants (Score:3, Informative)
This is already happening. Many agricultural seed products from ADM and others can only be germinated once, and will not reproduce naturally, meaning you have to buy new seed every year.