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Volume 60, Number 3 2006

What is the future of animal biotechnology?
Alison L. Van Eenennaam, Dept. of Animal Science/UC Davis

Download the Paper (PDF format) - July 20, 2006 Tell a colleague about it.
Go to California Agriculture home: News, free subscriptions, back issues search, and more! This work has been peer-reviewed.

ABSTRACT:
Animal biotechnology encompasses a broad range of techniques for the genetic improvement of domesticated animal species, although the term is increasingly associated with the more controversial technologies of cloning and genetic engineering. Despite the many potential applications of these two biotechnologies, no public or private entity has yet delivered a genetically engineered food-animal product to the global market, and the sale of milk or meat from cloned animals and their offspring is currently subject to a voluntary moratorium in the United States. The animal biotechnology industry faces a variety of scientific, regulatory, ethical and public acceptance issues. Effective and responsible communication among scientific, community, industry and government stakeholders will be required to reach a societal consensus on the acceptable uses of animal cloning and genetic engineering.

KEYWORDS:
transgenic animal, genetically engineered animal, genetically modified animal, clone, animal biotechnology

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Alison L. Van Eenennaam (2006) "What is the future of animal biotechnology?", California Agriculture: Vol. 60: No. 3, Page 3.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/anrcs/californiaagriculture/v60/n3/p3




 
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