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Take Note: The Risks & Benefits of GMOs

Troy Ott, Penn State professor of reproductive physiology in the College of Agricultural Sciences and associate director of the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences.

About half of America’s farmland is planted with genetically engineered crops—principally corn, cotton and soybeans. Genetic engineering allows scientists to change the genes in some farm animals and food crops to make them grow faster or bigger and be more resistant to bugs, weeds and disease. Proponents say the technique holds the key to feeding an ever-increasing population in the most environmentally conservative way. Opponents say the science of biotechnology is moving too quickly with neither adequate study nor precaution and that we tinker with nature at our own peril. Do the benefits outweigh the risks? We’ll get one scientist’s perspective. Dr. Troy Ott  works in the biotechnology field.  He’s a Penn State professor of reproductive physiology in the College of Agricultural Sciences and associate director of the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences.

Patty Satalia was a senior producer/host for WPSU-TV and FM from 1987 to 2017. Prior to joining Penn State Public Broadcasting, she worked in commercial television in Pittsburgh, first as a film editor and fill-in capsule news anchor for WPGH-TV, and later, for WPTT-TV as public affairs director and co-host of the talk-show, People, Places and Things.
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