Advances in identifying GM plants: current frame of the detection of transgenic GMOs
Materialtyp:
ArtikelSerie: Utgivningsinformation: Cambridge Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing Burleigh Dodds Science Publishing [Imprint] 2021Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (44 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781801462037
- Economics, Finance, Business and Management
- Industry & industrial studies
- Agribusiness and primary industries
- Agriculture, agribusiness and food production industries
- Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning
- The environment
- Environmental management
- Food security and supply
- Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes
- Industrial chemistry and manufacturing technologies
- Industrial chemistry and chemical engineering
- Food and beverage technology
- Agriculture and farming
- Sustainable agriculture
- Agronomy and crop production
- Agriculture
- Business and Management
- Engineering
- Environment
- Finance
- Geography
- Industrial processes
- K Economics
- KN Industry and industrial studies
- KNA Agribusiness and primary industries
- KNAC Agriculture
- Planning
- R Earth Sciences
- RN The environment
- RNF Environmental management
- RNFF Food security and supply
- T Technology
- TD Industrial chemistry and manufacturing technologies
- TDC Industrial chemistry and chemical engineering
- TDCT Food and beverage technology
- TV Agriculture and farming
- TVF Sustainable agriculture
- TVK Agronomy and crop production
- agribusiness and food production industries
- enforcement
- gentically modified organism (GMO)
- new breeding technique (NBT)
- scars and signatures
- standard norm
- thema EDItEUR
- traceability
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Transgenic GMOs were welcomed in the 1990s due to the difficulties distinguishing genetic and epigenetic modifications from random mutagenesis and their ability to insert new nucleic sequences more rapidly but still randomly. Their marketing in Europe has been accompanied by health and environmental risk assessments, specific monitoring and traceability procedures to preserve the free choice of consumers and allow the coexistence of different supply chains. This chapter reviews the regulations, detection techniques, strategies and standards that have been put in place in the European Union since 1996 to ensure the analytical traceability of these GMOs. The capacity of the matrix approach, initially targeted at transgenic GMOs, to trace other types of GMOs is discussed in an accompanying chapter.
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eng
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