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DeliveryValve 09-20-2010 06:10 PM

FDA hold hearing on approval of GMO salmon
 
1 Attachment(s)
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100906/sc_afp/usfoodbiotechfish_20100906070603

Quote:

US mulls approval of GM salmon

by Rob Lever Rob Lever – Mon Sep 6, 3:05 am ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US authorities have begun to consider approval for the first time the sale of genetically engineered salmon, a move that some say could open the door to more transgenic animals on American dinner tables.

A US Food and Drug Administration panel has set a hearing for September 19-20 to consider a proposal by Massachusetts-based AquaBounty Technologies for production and sale of a new Atlantic salmon with a growth hormone gene from the Chinook salmon that allows it to grow faster.

The company said the genetic change allows the fish to grow to market size in half the time of conventional salmon but that in all other respects, its AquAdvantage salmon "are identical to other Atlantic salmon."

The new strain of salmon can help meet rising demand for fish and reduce pressure on wild fish stocks, the firm contends. It says it can avoid the pollution, disease and other problems associated with saltwater fish farms by raising the salmon at inland facilities.

"The benefit of this technology is that because the fish grows more efficiently it can be grown faster and closer to population centers," says Ron Stotish, chief executive of the group, which is publicly traded in London.

Stotish, who said the firm hopes to sell its salmon eggs in the US, Canada and elsewhere, argues that new technologies are needed for a global population quickly depleting fish and other food supplies.

"I think this technology can be a tremendous aid to assuring a safe and sustainable food supply," he told AFP.

But environmental and food safety groups are raising fierce objections, saying this could not only endanger wild salmon but open the door to other kinds of genetically modified animal foods that may pose health or environmental dangers.

If approved, the salmon would be the first transgenic animal allowed for US human consumption, although officials have approved a goat with genetic modifications to produce an anti-clotting treatment.

Critics of the new salmon say approval could exacerbate the problem of farmed fish escaping from tanks and breeding with wild counterparts, with unpredictable results.

Jaydee Hanson, a policy analyst at the Center for Food Safety, a Washington-based watchdog group, said the company was basing its application on the "fiction" that introducing genes into an animal is the same as using drugs.

"Because the company is claiming this is a drug it has to demonstrate this is safe in the animal, but it doesn't have to show it is safe for people to eat," he told AFP.

The center was among a coalition of 31 groups urging the FDA to reject the application, and Hanson said approval could open the door to a variety of other kinds of genetically engineered animals ranging from tilapia to pigs to cows.

AquaBounty has pledged safeguards that include only using land-based facilities instead of ocean pens to prevent accidental release, and breeding that leads to sterile females.

Stotish said the new salmon are "the most studied fish in the world" and that regulators have considered a variety of scenarios.

"AquaBounty has taken unprecedented steps to assure that the fish cannot interact with wild populations," he said. "Not only are they all sterile females, as a condition of approval they will be raised in land-based contained aquaculture systems -- making escape into the wild an impossibility."

The FDA, in a preliminary assessment on the risks, said the likelihood of escape into the wild is "extremely small." As a result, it said the new salmon "are highly unlikely to cause any significant effects on the environment."

Critics remain unconvinced of the merits of transgenic salmon, derided by some as "Frankenfood."

"We all know there is a great appetite for salmon, but the solution is not to ?farm? genetically engineered versions to put more on our dinner tables; the solution is to work to bring our wild salmon populations back," says Jonathan Rosenfield, president of the SalmonAID Foundation, a coalition of commercial, tribal, and sports fishing interests.

If the FDA approves the request, it will then consider whether to label the salmon as genetically modified -- a move which might lead consumers to shun the fish.

But Hanson of the Center for Food Safety said that a special label would be warranted.

"Our position is that given the data we've seen it shouldn't be approved but if it is approved, it should be labeled," he said.

"If they don't label it, all other US farmed salmon is going to be assumed to be genetically engineered, so it would damage the industry."

http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/...1&d=1285020468
Photo: AquAdvantageŽ Salmon in the background; a non-GMO Atlantic salmon of the same age in the foreground.


Other links.


FDA to hold hearing on approval of GMO salmon


Clarified: What does "genetically modified" salmon mean?







.

DeliveryValve 09-20-2010 06:14 PM

If this gets approved, all I can say is every food item on our table will eventually be genetically altered through DNA.


Yikes! :eek:



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Kuan 09-20-2010 06:34 PM

I wonder what would happen if these Salmon get loose into our rivers and streams.

Chas H 09-20-2010 06:54 PM

In the movie "Jurasic Park" the cloned dinosaurs were all females. When a census of dinosaurs was taken, the park management found there were more individuals than what had been released. Nature, in the end, always prevails.
I doubt, even with rigorous security, that GMO salmon could be totally confined to inland pens.

Craig 09-20-2010 07:22 PM

This sounds like the first five minutes of every bad horror movie, in the real world I don't really care.

Billybob 09-20-2010 08:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kuan (Post 2548445)
I wonder what would happen if these Salmon get loose into our rivers and streams.

If we're lucky they'll eat Asian Carp fingerlings!

panZZer 09-20-2010 08:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Billybob (Post 2548524)
If we're lucky they'll eat Asian Carp fingerlings!

Salmon is a COLD Water fish -Dont think the missippi 's cold enought for it--but they could GM it like the brooke trout thats in the Texas, Oklahoma streams:(

Hatterasguy 09-20-2010 08:49 PM

Farming fish is the future, this isn't a bad idea to grow them fast. We already do it with chicken and junk fish like Tilapia.

Grow them fast and sell them cheap.

Its not problem if they get out, they already stock farm raised fish just about everywhere.

layback40 09-20-2010 09:55 PM

Cheap food for the masses. Problem is this fast growing stuff has no taste or tastes like cardboard.

jt20 09-20-2010 10:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by layback40 (Post 2548615)
Cheap food for the masses. Problem is this fast growing stuff has no taste or tastes like cardboard.


very similar to what happened to lumber.

when you remodel an old home / building and start digging into the old framing, the difference in the wood's characteristics from today's lumber is staggering.

it has color, smell, substance, tight rings, finer grain etc...

by comparison, its amazing the lumber of today can do half of what old growth timber could.

But I certainly prefer it being farmed than harvested from natural settings.

PaulC 09-20-2010 10:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Craig (Post 2548479)
This sounds like the first five minutes of every bad horror movie, in the real world I don't really care.

You'll feel differently next time you're flyfishing and a chinook the size of a Chrysler confuses you for the fly....

Craig 09-20-2010 10:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PaulC (Post 2548621)
You'll feel differently next time you're flyfishing and a chinook the size of a Chrysler confuses you for the fly....

I think I saw that movie too... Chuck Norris ends up fighting the mega-fish in the final scene.

tbomachines 09-20-2010 10:44 PM

In similar news, this woke me up this morning as a breaking news alert on my phone. I really need to get rid of my abc news iphone app....

http://abcnews.go.com/International/french-fisherman-catches-giant-carp/story?id=11662889

http://a.abcnews.com/images/Internat...100917_ssh.jpg

Chas H 09-20-2010 11:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Craig (Post 2548628)
I think I saw that movie too... Chuck Norris ends up fighting the mega-fish in the final scene.

I thought it was Betty White in "Lake Placid".


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