I expect that the cooking banana is capable of becoming a Western staple. Orange flesh could be the trigger that makes it so. This will still take time to implement but i am sure that an success and rising African prosperity will soon bring it to us.
Orange rice is also breaking into its natural markets as well with the usual complaints.
Yet this application of genetic engineering happens to be a significant humanitarian boon and makes it the likely best application.
Human trials planned for genetically-modified "super bananas"
According to the Queensland University of Technology's Prof. James
Dale, 650,000 to 700,000 children die worldwide every year due to
pro-vitamin A deficiency. Many of those children live in East African
nations such as Uganda. Dale's proposed solution? Take something that's
already grown and eaten there, and genetically modify it to produce the
needed vitamin. That's what he's done with the Highland cooking banana.
The resulting "super bananas" are about to be the subject of human
nutritional trials in the US.
Prof. Dale and his colleagues started work on the project in 2005,
backed by almost US$10 million in funds from the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation. They chose the cooking banana due to the fact that it's
already a key part of the diet in many East African nations, so an
improvement in the banana should have a marked effect on the health of
the population.
The super bananas were developed through a series of field trials in
north Queensland, Australia. They look like regular yellow cooking
bananas from the outside, but their flesh is orange in color – the more
pro-vitamin A is present, the more orange they are. Dale hopes to
ultimately get the vitamin level up to at least 20 micrograms per gram
dry weight.
They have already been tested on Mongolian gerbils in the US, with
promising results. In the upcoming trials, however, a group of human test subjects will be consuming them for a period of six weeks. The results should be determined by the end of the year.
In the meantime, the bananas are now being grown in field trials in
Uganda. The aim is to identify "an elite line of banana plants" over the
next three years, which could ultimately be grown not just in Uganda,
but a variety of East African nations. The technology could conceivably
also be applied to other related food crops, such as the plantain.
The university expects the Ugandan government to enact legislation
allowing for the commercialization of genetically modified crops within
six years.
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