It ’s been nearly a decade in evolution , but a genetically modified strain of bananas that ’s designed to combat starvationwill soon enter human testing . The banana tree are rich in beta - carotene which turns into vitamin A in the torso . For the children in Africa suffering from vitamin A inadequacy , this is a windfall . Also these banana tree are orange .
The specific enquiry is happening at the Queensland University of Technology in Australia thanks , in part , to nearly $ 10 million in backing from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation . The idea , however , is to spend off little lab - turn super banana tree trees ( since bananas do n’t have seeds ) to farmers in Uganda , where there ’s a huge solid food shortage and 70 percentage of the universe last on the yield . Vitamin A deficiencies are not only killing children but also get them to go blind , so the research moving forward is a very good thing .
These are no ordinary bananas . They ’re grown in far north Queensland to boost the beta - carotene levels . The build of the super bananas is also orange which cater a optical clew to their genetically - modified separateness . It ’s also sort of awesome .

This breakthrough is not alone thanks to the possibilities of frankenfruit . A good one-time fashioned crossbreed of aboriginal banana with orange flesh in Micronesia called the “ carat ” has been used to better eye sight in shaver for one C . By the early 2000s , scientist in Queenslandwere exploring ways to cultivate the karatand , for whatever reason , decided to go the route of familial modification .
trial of the super bananas will take place in the United States and are expected to last through the last of the yr . If all move well — and the scientists are confident it will — Ugandan farmers will be grow the novel bananas by 2020 . “ We do it our science will work , ” says James Dale , who ’s go the inquiry for twelvemonth . Andcreepy as genetically modified foods may be , there ’s nothing quite like science that works . [ Guardian ]
https://gizmodo.com/what-are-gmo-foods-and-are-they-okay-to-eat-1524547249

Image viaShutterstock , NIH
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