Glowing Potato Plants as Dryness Alert
dschuetz writes "Scientists in London (Reuters, on Excite) have developed a potato plant that faintly glows green when it needs water. The idea is to plant these as "sentinels" in a field of normal potatoes. A cool idea, but haven't we proven in the past that genetic modifications eventually spread from any openly planted crop to neighboring unmodified plants? Is there any real future for modified plants, or are we going to find some way to truly keep them isolated, genetically, from plants for consumption?" If you can have glowing christmas trees, why not potatoes, that's what I say.
So how do they keep them apart at harvest time?
If they are isolated in some way whilst growing, they won't be indicating anything very relevant.
then, to go with the green ketchup out there, they'll come up with green, glowing ketchup.
Then, to go with the green, glowing ketchup, we'll all decide that it'd be easier to find our kids if they glowed, gently....
This story has been around for over a year, see eg. here or here. I wonder why there's so much publicity surrounding it right now? (I heard a "news" article about this on the usually excellent BBC Radio 4 today programme). Perhaps they're about to try and commercialise this?
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Politics is about making compromises. Religion isn't. --Michael Horton
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But you have to go there to read the hygrometer -- all you have to do with the faintly glowing green plants is look out the window (well, at night...).
Better yet: you need a plant that will radio you when it wants water. Oh, where is Kevin Warwick when you need him?
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Politics is about making compromises. Religion isn't. --Michael Horton
The next advance needs to be to have neutered genetically modified plants. Then after that, neuter the scientists. Leave well enough alone. Will these plants allow for precise remote monitoring? The farmer will still need to drive to the field. In which case, he can just check the soil then using the time tested method of "playing" in the dirt to see if it clumps.
Yep, I never spell check.
More incorrect spellings can be found he
Greetings, ;-)
I submitted a story on this as well. Probably rejected. Anyhoo, I found it funny that genetic engineering suffers from 'feature creep' just like software engineering
Prime Mover