ES101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 30: Genetically Modified Crops, Selective Breeding, Ecological Footprint

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Humans have practiced the manipulation of species for years through the process of artificial selection. Selective breeding has been practiced within species and between similar species to produce animals and plants with highly desirable traits. The process of manipulating genes by isolating, modifying, multiplying and recombining them from different organisms is called genetic engineering or gene splicing . It enables scientists to transfer genes between different species that would never interbreed in nature. The resulting organism is called a genetically modified organism (gmos) or transgenic. What are some of the advantages of this type of genetic manipulation and. Takes about half as much time to develop a new crop or animal variety and costs less than traditional crossbreeding. Allows us to transfer traits between different types of organisms without need of breeding. If one day we could clone humans to live longer, would require many resources pollutants and environmental degradation and would have an enormous ecological footprint.

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