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HuckleB

(35,773 posts)
Fri Nov 6, 2015, 03:50 PM Nov 2015

Anti-GMOers Spread Baseless Fear About Possibly Non Existent Monsanto Bananas.


Posted by Mark Lynas on his Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/Mark-Lynas-168122006568847/ :

"Just when you thought anti-GMO campaigners couldn't get any dumber, they come up with this gem - warning about the danger of GMO bananas in Hawaii. These 'Monsanto bananas' will apparently "cross-pollinate" with conventional ones, forcing farmers to pay Monsanto.

http://mauinews.com/page/content.detail/id/603710/GMO-bananas-threaten-diversity-of-crops-in-Hawaii.html?nav=18

Note to the crazies: all bananas are sterile clones, and produce no pollen. Better come up with a new argument quick! (Actually I suspect the entire story is false - it's the first I've heard of Monsanto working on GMO bananas.)"
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Anti-GMOers Spread Baseless Fear About Possibly Non Existent Monsanto Bananas. (Original Post) HuckleB Nov 2015 OP
Not all bananas are sterile, but commercially grown bananas are. Xipe Totec Nov 2015 #1
The commercially grown part is the point. HuckleB Nov 2015 #2

Xipe Totec

(44,094 posts)
1. Not all bananas are sterile, but commercially grown bananas are.
Fri Nov 6, 2015, 04:08 PM
Nov 2015

There'a desperate race at the moment to find a genetically modified variety that is resistant to various wilts.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-06-04/banana-killer-on-the-march-fuels-risk-of-fruit-s-next-extinction

While there are more than 1,000 types of bananas, many are consumed where they are grown or are inedible. To make money on exports, growers had to rely on a single variety to ensure uniformity and keep production costs low. Until the 1960s, that was the Gros Michel, which all but disappeared after a decades-long spread of what came to be known as Panama disease.



Not all bananas are seedless, though. Some bananas contain dozens of pea-sized seeds. And those seeds may hold a key to protecting bananas from the diseases that threaten them.

https://student.societyforscience.org/article/saving-banana

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