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Biotech Earth Businesses

Genetically Engineered Seafood Coming To a Restaurant Near You (indianapublicmedia.org) 140

"The first genetically-modified animal for human consumption could be arriving in grocery stores across the United States as early as next year." Long-time Slashdot reader tomhath tipped us off to Indiana Public Media's report on AquaBounty Technologies: AquaBounty will produce a GMO salmon that CEO Ron Stotish says will grow faster than freshwater-raised fish. "It does so because we've given it the ability, using the same biological process that regulates growth in the unmodified salmon, to grow about twice as fast reaching market rate about half the time," Stotish says. The technology has been around since the 1990s, but it took until 2015 to receive approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, due to concerns about people eating genetically-modified animals. The genetic makeup of the biotech fish takes a growth-hormone regulatory gene from the Pacific Chinook salmon with a promoter gene from an ocean pout and puts it into the genome of an Atlantic salmon. The result causes for the growth hormone to remain on leading to faster growth rate than non GMO salmon.

The modified fish is able to grow to market size using 25 percent less feed than the traditional salmon, increasing cost efficiency... Stotish says his operation causes less harm than traditional fish farming. "We're not using coastal waterways, we're not putting antibiotics and medications into the water," Stotish says. "Our fish are in a controlled environment, we don't need antibiotics, we don't have to treat for sea lice."

The company says that every year Americans consume about 350,000 tons of Atlantic salmon -- more than 95% of which has to be imported.
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Genetically Engineered Seafood Coming To a Restaurant Near You

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  • Tuna (Score:3, Insightful)

    by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Sunday March 10, 2019 @03:01PM (#58248170) Journal
    Seriously, tuna and salmon are the 2 most eaten fish in world. Tuna should also be farmed, so fast growth is useful.
    • Imagine tuna stack vertically in cages like chickens all in farm in the basement of the amazon warehouse.
      PrimeSashimi delivered by drone. No parasites to worry about.

    • by dryeo ( 100693 )

      The USA is not the world, and even in America, it can be argued that Pollock is more eaten. All those crab sticks and such.
      Going by harvest levels, various types of carp (grass silver and common), along with the Peruvian Anchovy and even Tiapia out number Tuna, which out numbers salmon.
      Then there is shrimp.
      Note that the carp and tiapia are mostly farmed.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • Misleading title (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Maelwryth ( 982896 )
    "Massachusetts-based AquaBounty Technologies has developed a biotech salmon that it plans to grow near no major body of water, in a production facility in the small town of Albany, Indiana. The company producing the breed of high-tech fish hopes to change the aquaculture industry."

    Not seafood.
    • Not seafood.

      Good luck convincing me to say "waterfood" without the quotes, though.

    • The GMO salmon will be initially grown inland on a small scale. Once it is no longer a novelty, the operation will be scaled up and the fish will be raised in the ocean. They are taking it slow to avoid a backlash.

    • Not seafood.

      Walleye and trout are freshwater fish, but you'll still find them in the seafood section of the menu.

  • by Mr. Dollar Ton ( 5495648 ) on Sunday March 10, 2019 @03:19PM (#58248234)

    as long as it is clearly labeled so that I can make an informed choice.

    • So you can make an informed choice, by weighing up all the misinformation you're being told from both sides.

      • It looks like you're projecting straight from your experience. Please go on...

      • So you can make an informed choice, by weighing up all the misinformation you're being told from both sides.

        This is the level of philosophy that slashdot is capable of, right here.

        "I cannot understand, therefore you cannot understand."

        Sad. But also true.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday March 10, 2019 @03:58PM (#58248420)

      as long as it is clearly labeled so that I can make an informed choice.

      Even the non-GMO salmon is fed pellets made from GMO-corn and GMO-soybean meal.

      If you want to avoid all GMO you need to buy "Organic" or "Wild".

      Another way to make an informed choice by reading information on the topic instead of listening to nonsense from Greenpeace.

      People opposed to GMOs know the least about them [biotech-now.org]

      • Another way to make an informed choice by reading information on the topic

        Yeah, reading information is always good. Now, let's see how unbiased is this "Biotechnology Innovation Organization"....

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
        https://www.sourcewatch.org/in... [sourcewatch.org]

        Yep, an entirely unbiased source of "information", this one.

          • What does this link have to do with my point? I'll bold the relevant part of my comment for you, because you obviously lack reading comprehension: Sell whatever GMO you want, as long as it is clearly labeled so that I can make an informed choice.

            I am not pro or against GMO, I am not interested in your (or anyone's) opinion as to it safety. When I say informed, I mean one specific thing - a label on the product that makes it clear if I'm buying a GMO or not.

            When I decide how to spend my money it is my right

            • as long as it is clearly labeled

              Regulations should be based on scientific evidence. They should not pander to superstitions. There is zero evidence that GMO salmon is harmful, and no reason to believe that it is.

              If someone wants to grow non-GMO salmon, and label it as such, they are free to do so. This is exactly how it works with other GMO foods. If you go into any grocery store, there are plenty of products labeled "GMO Free", or "Organic" which implies GMO-Free.

              • Regulations should be based on scientific evidence.

                Not really, the regulations of the market should first and foremost reflect the preferences of the participants. That you choose to disparage such preferences as "superstition" is your value judgement, and it is just as valid as the opposite one.

                But since you insist on "scientific evidence" as a basis of a regulation, let's see what is available. urns out there is plenty. First, the evidence that markets operate best when full information is available to t

                • Not really, the regulations of the market should first and foremost reflect the preferences of the participants.

                  Poppycock. Mandating information based on verifiable justification, perhaps. But mandating information just because people have unfounded fears from misinformation campaigns is not required.

                  Next you'll tell us that manufacturers should be required to label all "gluten free" products as such because some people are gluten-sensitive -- even products that cannot possibly contain gluten. It's really pretty funny looking at labels today, where companies freely demonstrate an ignorance of what gluten is. I've se

                  • Mandating information based on verifiable justification.

                    Mandating information because there is material, easily ascertainable difference in the origin of what you buy, you mean? Yeah, even you seem to agree with that, in abstract. Until it comes to your pet peeves :)

                    But mandating information just because people have unfounded fears... Next you'll tell us that manufacturers should be required to label all "gluten free" products as such

                    That's a good, two-paragraph strawman that is also a false analogy. Congr

                    • Mandating information because there is material, easily ascertainable difference in the origin of what you buy, you mean?

                      No. Not even close. And you know it. Do you really think that there should be mandatory labeling of corn chips to identify which state of the US the corn was grown in, for example? That's a difference in the origin that makes no difference in any scientifically discernible way. "Maltodextrin" which comes from GMO corn is identical to that which comes from non-GMO, and is thus indiscernible in any scientific way, but according to you, it has to be labeled because it is an "easily ascertainable difference in

    • They will lobby for laws to prevent laws that require labeling.

  • A lot of things can go wrong here. No, its not something that you can say with high confidence is safe. Likely what happened was that someone with big bags of cash paid off someone in the agencies to approve this thing. Money talks, and big business will play fast and loose.

    It will end up in the environment and it would probably overproliferate and have some devastating effect on the food web.

    The growth hormones could have disasterous effects on humans including promoting cancers. All around a foolish and d

  • The first genetically-modified animal for human consumption could be arriving in grocery stores across the United States

    Would there be the possibility that some of it may be kindly purveyed upon us in the soon-to-be 51st state?
    --
    J. Rees-Mogg c/o The Houses Of Parliament, London.

  • ... If you're not one of those salmon.

  • That's just asking for trouble [schlockmercenary.com]. Predicted over 18 years ago, too!

  • Like with GMO or hormone poisoned beef, I wonder how long it takes the US will try to force the EU (or asian countries) to allow to sell it there.

  • We have enough natural and farmed salmon. Why not genetically modify a 'problem' fish like silver carp [wikipedia.org]. It's a problem fish here in North America where it also has low culinary value (even though it has high culinary value in China). Why not change silver carp to address some of its shortcomings?

Scientists will study your brain to learn more about your distant cousin, Man.

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