Genetically modified pig ‘Frankenswine’ cheaper, greener
January 5th, 2011 - 12:07 pm ICT by ANILondon, Jan 5 (ANI): Scientists have genetically modified a Yorkshire pig, which will be the first of a new generation of ‘Frankenswine’ hogs that are designed to be cheaper and greener.
It tastes no different than the ordinary pig, but the GM superpig, nicknamed the Enviropig, contains less phosphorus in its manure and so poses less risk to rivers, streams and lakes.
However, GM critics have slammed the move, saying that the animals are ‘anything but environmentally friendly’ - and could lead to more intensive pig farms.
Pigs are fed phosphorus to help form strong bones, teeth and cell walls. Most farmers have to feed pigs an enzyme called phytase to make plant phosphorus digestible. But phytase supplements are not very good at breaking down phosphorus, so a large amount is flushed out of their bodies in waste.
To take care of this, researchers took a gene responsible for the creation of phytase from E.coli bacteria and added it to the genetic make-up of a Yorkshire pig.
They combined it with a gene taken from a mouse before inserting it into the Enviropig’s DNA.
“They are pretty friendly and pretty gregarious. These pigs are almost identical to a normal Yorkshire pig. They look normal, they grow normally and they behave normally,” the Daily Mail quoted Professor Rich Moccia, of the University of Guelph, in Ontario, Canada, as telling the BBC.
Vicky Hird, of Friends of the Earth, said the name Enviropig ‘was a huge irony’.
“Pigs reared in these intensive units can never be sustainable because they require so much soya which is grown by clearing forests which leads to more greenhouse gases being released,” she said.
“And when it comes to GM food, consumers are voting with their feet. They won’t accept it.” (ANI)
- GM cloned piglets in China 'bring transplant hope for humans' - Mar 23, 2011
- Egypt denies being source of E.coli - Jul 07, 2011
- UAE teaches farmers about E.coli - Jun 28, 2011
- How viruses con bugs into working for them - Jan 27, 2012
- Copper effective against new E. coli strains - Jun 03, 2011
- Glowing trees could double up as streetlights - Nov 28, 2010
- UAE bans cucumber imports from European countries - Jun 02, 2011
- Russia may ban German meat imports - Jun 22, 2011
- Russia ready to lift EU vegetable import ban - Jul 25, 2011
- Lettuce E. Coli Outbreak Spreads To Tennessee - May 14, 2010
- Farm animals new source of drug resistant superbugs - Sep 23, 2010
- One E.coli case identified in Finland - Jun 04, 2011
- Many biofuels less sustainable than petrol: Experts - Apr 04, 2012
- Cockroaches could help combat E.coli - Sep 05, 2010
- Herbicide tolerant GM crops pose serious health threat: Greenpeace - Aug 04, 2011
Tags: cell walls, daily mail, e coli, e coli bacteria, food consumers, friends of the earth, gm food, greenhouse gases, hird, hogs, irony, london jan, manure, moccia, ontario canada, pig farms, pigs, soya, university of guelph, vicky