How CRISPR Can Create More Ethical Eggs (cornell.edu) 91
Slashdot reader wooloohoo shares a new article from Cornell's Alliance for Science, a group who gives its mission as correcting misinformation and countering conspiracy theories slowing progress on issues including synthetic biology and agricultural innovations:
There are two types of chickens: the broilers that we eat and the layers that produce the eggs. The layers don't have enough meat to make them useful for human consumption and since only hens can lay eggs, that leaves the male layers useless. As a result, billions of newly hatched male layer chicks are killed each year.
Now the Israeli ag-tech startup eggXYt has found a way to humanely address this dilemma through the use of CRISPR — the gene editing technique that allows scientists to make targeted, specific genetic tweaks...
By using CRISPR, eggXYt's scientists can edit the genes of chickens to make them lay sex-detectable eggs... The global egg industry saves the costs and the ethical conundrum of killing half of its product and billions of additional eggs are added to the global market to help meet growing demand.
Now the Israeli ag-tech startup eggXYt has found a way to humanely address this dilemma through the use of CRISPR — the gene editing technique that allows scientists to make targeted, specific genetic tweaks...
By using CRISPR, eggXYt's scientists can edit the genes of chickens to make them lay sex-detectable eggs... The global egg industry saves the costs and the ethical conundrum of killing half of its product and billions of additional eggs are added to the global market to help meet growing demand.
This is about efficiency, not ethics (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously. The ethics-angle has been fantasized in there by the PR department.
Not that there is anything wrong with increasing efficiency.
Re:This is about efficiency [or ads], not ethics (Score:3)
Or advertising, but you're definitely right that it's not about ethics.
From a technical perspective I wonder why they couldn't do it the other way? It would seem to be even more efficient if they could combine both versions of the chickens into one variety, where only the males are broilers and the females are still good layers. Instead (per the linked story) they are just diverting the male eggs to egg sales. (But I thought most of the eggs we eat these days are unfertilized?) Or anther technical option co
Re:This is about efficiency [or ads], not ethics (Score:4, Informative)
Eggs we eat are unfertilized. Normally. This company plans to take fertilized eggs, but immediately subject them to a scanner causing them to glow if they have the male-sex-linked gene. If so, they don't go to the hatchery and the embryo never develops from the yolk; they can be sold for consumption, or - if there's public rejection of that - to the pharmaceutical and cosmetics industry.
According to this site [thehappychickencoop.com], the only difference in a freshly laid fertilized egg and an equivalent non-fertilized one will be a white "bulls-eye" appearance on the yolk. If the egg is kept warm for just a few days, however, it'll start developing veins in the yolk. This is not to be confused with random red spots inside an egg, which can be just from a ruptured blood vessel from the hen. If it's refrigerated, the embryo will die and not develop further.
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I imagine they'd do a different solution if they could, of course - such as the ability to turn on or off the laying of males, or to make males develop good broiler genetics, or whatnot. But I'm sure that's a much more complex task to develop.
As a side note, I read about the background to CRISPR/Cas9 recently, and for anyone who hasn't, I strongly recommend it, because it's fascinating. TL/DR: some bacteria have their own internal immune system, based on CRISPR/Cas9. It's a form of protection against bact
Re: This is about efficiency [or ads], not ethics (Score:2)
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Or advertising, but you're definitely right that it's not about ethics.
From a technical perspective I wonder why they couldn't do it the other way? It would seem to be even more efficient if they could combine both versions of the chickens into one variety, where only the males are broilers and the females are still good layers.
Well, maybe we will eventually be able to do that. But genetic engineering is far, far more difficult than doing software and the human race has not even mastered software these days.
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Mostly concurrence, but that's why I worry so much about the potential for misuse of CRISPR. But as I already noted, I don't want to give anyone any bad ideas.
(Or maybe I should say "Full concurrence within the scope of your small comment"?)
(Hmm... That gives me a weird idea for partial thumbs up and down as an intermediate step between Reddiocy and a full MEPR system. (And I'm reminded of a system with a "strong thumb up" option.))
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Table eggs - whether sold intact by the dozen, or on the breaker market - are all un
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Thanks for the details, especially about the ZW thing. (Sorry I'm slow in replying, but there's more to life than Slashdot, as the old joke goes. Still nice to see the outbreaks of actual expertise around here.)
(But I did know about some of those details, especially as regards the factory broilers versus free-range chickens. Yesterday's lunch included a good example of a bad chicken, at least for my tastes.)
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As you say, there is more to life than Slashdot
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VERY interesting ZW stuff.
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You suck at trolling. Go back to 4chan and LURK MORE. DICK.
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Fuck all y'all.
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I disagree. Many people do believe that animal treatment and welfare is important, even for animals like chickens. See the rising popularity of, e.g., cage-free eggs.
This particular case doesn't have to be an either/or. It can both be ethical and increase efficiency. Perhaps the majority of the decision makers in big ag care more about the efficiency angle, but that doesn't diminish the value of the ethical improvement.
Re:This is about efficiency, not ethics (Score:5, Interesting)
I agree.
I like my food on the carnivorous side of the spectrum. I enjoy pork chops, turkey, chicken, beef, all that good and juicy stuff.
But I don't like the way many of the animals are treated so I can have a delicious dinner. Letting them have a relatively decent life until they are killed is not completely opposed to wanting to eat them.
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It's not just that they're more vocal (Score:2)
Also as a vegetarian I can say it's damn near impossible for people not to know, since food is so integral to living. Sooner or later somebody's gonna do a pot luck and notice there's no meat on my plate, or bring sandwiches and notice I ordered the veggie one. Or I'll get invited to a BBQ.
It's not information I volunteer, but it's going to come up.
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Among my friends and co-workers in the SF-Bay area, I estimate a third are veggie or vegan.
Any potluck or BBQ around here is going to have plenty of veggie options.
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Top hat and tails [youtube.com].
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Well, keep kidding yourself. With those standards, farming chickens is inherently unethical, and there is no remedy for that. I can respect vegetarians. I can respect meat eaters. But those on between that think they can somehow make raising and slaughtering animals for food "ethical" must be the worst of the worst, because they add fundamental dishonesty to it all.
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Again, I disagree completely.
I do not believe it is unethical for humans to eat meat.
Slaughtering animals is inherent to eating meat.
Therefore, I also do not believe slaughtering animals to eat is inherently unethical.
If I am given the choice of of consuming the meat of:
(1) an animal that was kept entirely caged and unable to move, force fed, treated very poorly (beaten, shocked, etc), and slaughtered with no efforts to minimize pain and suffering; or
(2) an animal that was allowed some space to move, was tr
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Again, I disagree completely.
I do not believe it is unethical for humans to eat meat.
Slaughtering animals is inherent to eating meat.
Therefore, I also do not believe slaughtering animals to eat is inherently unethical.
Well, we could just wait for them to die of natural causes, and eat them then.
And there is always roadkill.
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Hah, I suppose my tautology did leave out roadkill.
Animals dying of natural causes--does that include the American Indian practice of driving buffalo off cliffs to their death or in to water to drown? Hmmm!
Re: This is about efficiency, not ethics (Score:2)
A chicken in a well run farm may actually be happier than in the wild. How do you think the life of a chicken is? Constantly hunted by predators, then bitten and eaten when they become weak.
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A chicken in a well run farm may actually be happier than in the wild.
How many domesticated chickens fly the coop when the door is left ajar?
How many wild red jungle fowl [wikipedia.org] voluntarily enter cages?
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A chicken in a well run farm may actually be happier than in the wild.
How many domesticated chickens fly the coop when the door is left ajar?
How many wild red jungle fowl [wikipedia.org] voluntarily enter cages?
First you have to assume that a chicken leaving the coop is escaping. In our fair cities suburbs, many people keep chickens. They are out all day with no boundaries, and they apparently happily go back in their coops in the evening. Most are shut in at night as protection against any predators, then they come out again, and seem pretty content. You do have to be careful driving through neighborhoods with them.
As for red junglefowl - they are kept around here as well by many of the same people. While I ca
Re: This is about efficiency, not ethics (Score:2)
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We'd done a market search for the next "right to operate" topic. Basically, the next issue in food production where something that was distasteful, but currently accepted, would be rendered no longer acceptable by consumers (antibiotics in livestock being the classic example). The slaughtering of the male ha
What a wastefully western POV (Score:4, Insightful)
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Old hens are good for soup.
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Don't forget balut, if you know it's male in the egg you can make balut (chick cooked in its own egg) which is a staple food across indonesia and quite tasty. Which again is a problem with the consumer.
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No different from eating chicken or egg, if the idea of bones bother you undeveloped bones are like firm crunchy pasta.
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Oh stop seeing conspiracy theorists everywhere. (Score:1)
You drag a few nutters through thown so you can call everybody who disagrees with you one of them
Always deliberately staying quiet about the dirty secret that the vast majority of people is not against genetics, but just against handing those tools to completely conscous-free greedy psychopaths like you, that neither have the slightest bit of foresight what the consequences of their actions are, and that do not care either.
Because everybody who criticites you is just "dar eebil conspiracy theorists". How co
They may have less meat (Score:2)
But wouldn't they still be useful for making stock?
Regardless, what this group is really doing is drawing a distinction without a difference.
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The demand for wings and boneless, skinless breasts means there's plenty of carcasses available for stock.
This is really a step forward. Male chicks currently get shoveled into a shredder. Even just composting the eggs would be more efficient and humane. If they can get used, even better.
This happened with dairy cows some time ago (Score:4, Insightful)
We're nowhere's near the capacity of the planet to make food, and birth rates continue to decline below replacement in any place that modernizes and educates. It's funny to think that our problems are already just distribution [youtube.com] and that the sci-fi trope of overpopulation from the 70s and 80s was completely wrong. Heck, if anything we're going to have underpopulation in 100 years (assuming we don't regress).
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Most other stuff is the same, especially as our standard of living improves. Elsewhere, over the past decade, as the middle class grows, I have seen more battery farm eggs. The demand for cheaper fresher product.
It costs money to raise a chickens, a fixed to process. If there is no
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Dairy has sexed semen available. This is sorted by a machine and gets you 90% female or male, depending on what you want. This semen costs more, is not used by all farmers, and has nothing to do with CRISPr. So not really the same at all, but the outcome is similar.
We can do this with humans! (Score:2, Insightful)
Eggs can never be ethical (Score:1)
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And BTW, the next pandemic may very well come in the form of avian flu right out of a chicken farm.
In the US, there are a lot of controls and regulations to make sure that doesn't happen.
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And BTW, the next pandemic may very well come in the form of avian flu right out of a chicken farm.
In the US, there are a lot of controls and regulations to make sure that doesn't happen.
I'm not talking just about the US, as it is not the only country in the world. And even if I did, you can't say that the US handled this pandemic even remotely well, what would guarantee that a future outbreak of an animal-born disease will be handled properly? Also, isn't just not using hens for our benefit, and not reproducing them an even more effective way than taking risks and hoping that those controls work correctly?
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Also, isn't just not using hens for our benefit, and not reproducing them an even more effective way than taking risks and hoping that those controls work correctly?
You mean you want everyone to become vegetarian? Not realistic.
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Plenty of eggs are perfectly ethical.
My mom's flock of chickens roam the yard and gardens, eating bugs and whatever else they find interesting. They drop an egg every couple of days. Sure, hundreds of years ago those breeds were selected for being good layers, but if doing that is unethical, all of our food is unethical.
Those unfertilized eggs are coming out of them unless there's a rooster to fertilize them. Is it unethical to not have a rooster there? Given how rough they are on the hens sometimes, that's
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Did this pop into anyone else's head? [youtu.be]
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Plenty of eggs are perfectly ethical.
My mom's flock of chickens roam the yard and gardens, eating bugs and whatever else they find interesting. They drop an egg every couple of days. Sure, hundreds of years ago those breeds were selected for being good layers, but if doing that is unethical, all of our food is unethical.
Those unfertilized eggs are coming out of them unless there's a rooster to fertilize them. Is it unethical to not have a rooster there? Given how rough they are on the hens sometimes, that's a questionable view to hold.
So happy chickens doing chicken stuff in a big yard, dropping unfertilized eggs when they feel like it because they're happy and well fed. Doesn't get much more ethical than that. Those chickens live a great life. Safety, security, ample food and water, a warm coop at night. Hell, if someone made me a similar offer, I'd definitely consider it.
Even backyard chickes are not completely ethical. Here's a very good and short video that will explain it in more detail: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
To summarize, laying that many eggs, even if it's on your backyard, will inevitably take a huge toll on their bodies, and the reason for that is that they have been selected to lay 30 times more eggs than their ancestors used to.
The unethical part of course it's not "not having a rooster there". The hens, naturally, will eat and enjoy their own unfertiliz
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Hens have been modified by artificial selection
So are we to understand that you're against agricultural breeding of organisms? Unless you're a member of a hunter/gatherer group (which seems unlikely if you're posting on SlashDot) you literally do not eat anything that wasn't artificially bred to improve its food producing capabilities.
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Hens have been modified by artificial selection
So are we to understand that you're against agricultural breeding of organisms? Unless you're a member of a hunter/gatherer group (which seems unlikely if you're posting on SlashDot) you literally do not eat anything that wasn't artificially bred to improve its food producing capabilities.
No, what I'm against is the breeding of sentient beings for our benefit. Sentient beings are those with a nervous system that live a subjective life experience and can feel pain.
The reason is, whether you like animals or not, it's undeniable that, even though their perceptions are different than ours, they are aware, they are "someone", so it's unethical to use them because we're not giving them a choice, they cannot decide whether they want that or not, and they only exist because we will obtain something
There are actually 3 (Score:2)
"There are two types of chickens: the broilers that we eat and the layers that produce the eggs."
The capon is the 3rd one and taste the best.
Same goal, different mechanism (Score:2)
Alternately you could sex select the chicken semen with sperm sorting. It's not normally done at large scale, but the basic underlying technology exists now.
"hens" and "males" - why is that? (Score:2)
It amuses me how they were happy to use the gender-specific term for female chickens, but avoided using one for males. I'm guessing it's so they could get social media sharing to help spread the story etc.
Even so though, what's wrong with *rooster*? :)
Re:"hens" and "males" - why is that? (Score:4, Informative)
"Rooster" is an adult male chicken (or at least chicken-adjacent, there's other fowl that have roosters). Just as a newborn boy is not a man, an egg or male chick is not a rooster.
The term you are looking for is cockerel; the answer you are looking for is "because news stories have to be written for the lowest common denominator".
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"because news stories are written by the lowest common denominator".
ftfy
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Pretty much every people in history have eaten eggs, they're a nutritious compact food source. People who lived near large rookeries often ate almost nothing else during nesting months. Throughout history a population who didn't eat eggs would have been considered weird.
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Pretty much every awful thing you can think of (incest, rape, go deeper!) has been done by pretty much every people in history.
Your same point applies - they would also say 'not doing those things' would be considered weird. Women voting and no human slavery would be 'weird' not so long ago as well. (And in some areas persists.)
Not a great argument, especially since we're in the here and now, and arguably know better.
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Know better? Know better than what? Know better than to eat delicious food? Screw that. I've heard that same sentiment about eating mushrooms, organ meats, wild game, guinea pigs, cured or preserved meat and fish, sausages, spices, and salt. Know what? Life is too short not to enjoy it, and if we are able to take anything with us after death the memory of the wonderful things we ate would be some of the most pleasant.
Go ahead and limit yourself to your bland marginally-interesting diet in the quest fo
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Funny, most people who go vegan talk about how much more food they're exposed to. Name all the meats you eat, now name all the fruits, vegetables, nuts seeds and grains you can think of. Pretty sure you're the one who's lacking imagination, and you're probably experiencing less foods than me. And if something as base as food is as good a 'pleasurable experience' you're having, you're really missing out on a lot.
And why is it 'life is too short' is a sentiment to do whatever you want - how short do you think
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How much more food you're exposed to in the very restrictive vegan diet? Good grief, what the frack were they eating before?
I married a Peruvian, the country is a gastronomical dream. Meats we eat would include mutton, lamb, pork, beef (rarely), guinea pig, buffalo, turkey, duck, chicken (our own and purchased), rabbit (wild and domesticated), venison, smelt, perch (when in Michigan), various species of trout and salmon, tuna, mackerel, catfish, cod, clams, scallops. When in Peru add moury, pejerrey, coo
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I would argue superiority is being complicit in the torture and execution other species just because you like how they taste. Not to mention all the destruction to the planet their production entails. Just look up how much land is used for livestock for a small taste.
Thanks for proving my point tho, lots more non-animal foods are out there to eat. Why not stick to those?
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Pigs would eat you or me in a second if they had a chance, and chickens would happily pick over whatever they left. Five thousand years ago the most feared sound in Europe was not 'Roar" or 'Grr' but 'MOO' as sharp-horned cattle were **much** more aggressive and stampeded in herds towards danger rather than away from it (which is why Cro Magnons ate a lot of horse and almost no beef).
Just look up how much land is used for livestock for a small taste.
That's an issue with the modern western diet, you won't see an entire slab of meat served on a plate in most of the world.
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All I can say is you're completely out of touch with livestock. Check out what the term 'domesticated' means. They're bred to be docile. Spend some time with a pig who isn't being tortured on a factory farm, and they're quite friendly and charming.
Again - look up how much land is used by livestock. You should really challenge the fantasy world in your head more. Switching species most definitely will not solve these issues.
You really like your logical fallacies. Just because something is pleasurable, or bec
Both (Score:2)
"There are two types of chickens: the broilers that we eat and the layers that produce the eggs."
Except for (classic) Rhode Island Reds, a chicken that was bred to be both
Storytime (Score:2)
Ethical? (Score:1)
Bollocks. The bottom line is that it will make (more) money. There is zero considering of the consequences. That much is apparent from the articles on this.
If you care... (Score:2)
If you care about ethical eggs, just don't eat eggs fer crissakes!
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No sex identity? (Score:1)
Just get the male chickens to identify as female so they can lay eggs too LOL.
Sound absurd? Why do we allow this shit in our society then? Two sexes, male and female.