Viewpoint: Do we really need GM fish? The case for growing (and eating) AquaBounty’s biotech, fast-growing salmon

Viewpoint: Do we really need GM fish? The case for growing (and eating) AquaBounty’s biotech, fast-growing salmon

Lucy Stitzer |
Innovation and creative thinking in the protein industry is ever-evolving. You may have read some of our posts on the ...
PEW global survey: Caution about research on gene editing, but wide support for treating diseases in human embryos

PEW global survey: Caution about research on gene editing, but wide support for treating diseases in human embryos

Global publics take a cautious stance toward scientific research on gene editing, according to an international survey from Pew Research ...
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Why humanity will likely be around for a long time

Nick Longrich |
Will our species go extinct? The short answer is yes. The fossil record shows everything goes extinct, eventually. Almost all ...
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Viewpoint: Depopulation conspiracy debunked. Western billionaires aren’t using GMOs to control Africa’s food supply

Uchechi Moses |
The truth is that African farmers need biotech crops as climate change makes farming an increasingly difficult profession ...
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Viewpoint: Europe’s blanket opposition to gene editing, pesticides means higher food prices for world’s poorest people

Fred Roeder |
By 2070 the world will be populated by approximately 10.5 billion people. This means that we will need to be ...
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Podcast: How do COVID vaccines work? CRISPR kills cancer; Danish study debunks mask mandates?

Cameron English, Kevin Folta |
The leading COVID-19 vaccines are RNA-based immunizations and the first of their kind. How do they work, and are they ...
Viewpoint: COVID won't subside in the US until 70% of us are immune. That means: 'Get a vaccine'

Viewpoint: COVID won’t subside in the US until 70% of us are immune. That means: ‘Get a vaccine’

Henry Miller, John Cohrssen |
The United States is one of the most seriously COVID-19-impacted countries, faring the worst among the ten most-affected countries worldwide, as ...
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Brain food or health fad: Can you really boost cognition with nootropics?

Hayley Philip |
What if you could think better, faster, and have a stronger memory? Nootropics, found in foods and supplements, are believed ...
Halal effect: Global Muslim communities face unique COVID challenges, including a religion-grounded hesitation to vaccines

Halal effect: Global Muslim communities face unique COVID challenges, including a religion-grounded hesitation to vaccines

Mariam Sajid |
COVID-19 has spared no ethnic, racial or religious group. It treats everyone with equal disdain. But that doesn’t mean that ...
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As the CRISPR revolution advances, here’s how gene editing will actually help farmers and consumers

Luis Ventura |
2020 has been an eventful year for gene editing. The recent Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to Emmanuelle Charpentier ...
Sordid ledger: Humans’ destructive history of wiping out other species

Sordid ledger: Humans’ destructive history of wiping out other species

Emma Bryce |
Sometime in the late 1600s, in the lush forests of Mauritius, the very last dodo took its last breath. After ...
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Viewpoint: Glyphosate-cancer trials illustrate how tort lawyers undermine science in the courtroom

Richard Williams |
Should we be fair to chemical manufacturers when they are sued? First of all, who are they? Since everything in ...
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Free will vs genetics: How much do our genes shape our actions?

Hannah Critchlow |
Many of us believe we are masters of own destiny, but new research is revealing the extent to which our ...
Viewpoint: Europe's globally important wine industry threatened by pesticide, biotech phobias

Viewpoint: Europe’s globally important wine industry threatened by pesticide, biotech phobias

Steve Savage |
“Make food systems fair, healthy and environmentally-friendly.” That's the lofty goal of the European Union's (EU) Farm to Fork Strategy, ...
Level the playing field: Genetics makes us not only different but unequal. CRISPR could change that. Should we do it?

Level the playing field: Genetics makes us not only different but unequal. CRISPR could change that. Should we do it?

Erik Parens |
Over the past decade, economists, sociologists and psychologists have begun collaborating with geneticists to investigate how genomic differences among human ...
Podcast: Trans women in female-only sports; Men and women need distinct brain tumor therapies; Illegal GMOs in Peru

Podcast: Trans women in female-only sports; Men and women need distinct brain tumor therapies; Illegal GMOs in Peru

Cameron English, Kevin Folta |
Should trans women be allowed to compete in female-only sports? It's a polarizing question with no easy answer in a ...
Viewpoint: Nobel Prize for CRISPR refutes anti-GMO activist rhetoric about crop gene editing

Viewpoint: Nobel Prize for CRISPR refutes anti-GMO activist rhetoric about crop gene editing

Stuart Smyth |
The year is coming to an end, and 2020 has popped a balloon filled with myths, untruths and lies deliberately ...
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Sustainability gap on Farm to Fork: What are the global consequences of Europe’s embrace of ‘green political correctness’

Jon Entine |
European Union politicians call it a “protein transition” strategy—the continent’s sustainable farming blueprint embodied in the Green Deal, the heart ...
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High-tech medical and dental innovation garner the headlines but the most impactful practices are mostly lower tech and prevention-focused

Henry Miller, Shiv Sharma |
Much of the progress in medicine during the past half-century has involved expensive, high-tech diagnostic tests and therapies.  The trend in ...
Are Sudanese Arabs?

Are Sudanese Arabs?

Ibrahim Omer |
Sudan, once the largest and one of the most geographically diverse states in Africa, split into two countries in July ...
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Viewpoint: Genetics and AI have launched an agricultural revolution. But ‘blind techno-optimism’ could have harmful consequences

Charlotte-Anne Chivers, David Rose |
Depending on who you listen to, artificial intelligence may either free us from monotonous labour and unleash huge productivity gains, ...
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Our Stone Age ancestors thrived on ‘chunks of meat,’ but plants were just as key to their survival

Alex Whiting |
Early humans wouldn't be able to survive without glucose from plants ...
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When humans evolved selfishness

Steve Taylor |
There has long been a general assumption that human beings are essentially selfish. We’re apparently ruthless, with strong impulses to ...
reverse dieting is this the secret to keeping the weight off

‘Reverse dieting’ fad reality check: Is it possible to maintain a lower body weight while consuming more calories?

Angela Dowden |
We all know that when it comes to weight loss, dropping the pounds is the easy part. It’s keeping weight ...
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Podcast: COVID killed anti-GMO activism? Environmentalists split over glyphosate; Predatory journal Pokémon hoax

Cameron English, Kevin Folta |
Could the COVID-19 pandemic end anti-GMO activism as we know it? Environmentalists are split over the controversial weedkiller glyphosate; some ...
Battle over 15-year GMO ban extension rages in Peru as farmers breed and cultivate illegal biotech seed

Battle over 15-year GMO ban extension rages in Peru as farmers breed and cultivate illegal biotech seed

Sherly Montaguth |
In the midst of a ferocious debate over the future of biotechnology in Latin America, the Peruvian Congress recently extended ...
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To the victor go the spoils: How Homo sapiens prevailed in battles for survival with Neanderthals

Nick Longrich |
Around 600,000 years ago, humanity split in two. One group stayed in Africa, evolving into us. The other struck out ...