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Bt brinjal farmer Hafizur Rahman shows the damage caused by fruit and shoot borer infestation of non-GMO brinjal on his farm in the Tangail district of Bangladesh.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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A genetically engineered, disease-resistant, Hawaii-grown papaya is ready for eating.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Potatoes ruined by late blight disease (left) are compared to healthy potatoes.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Genetically engineered Bt brinjal is ready for harvest in the Tangail District of Bangladesh.
Photo: Alliance for Science
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Farmer Khalilur Rahman harvests genetically engineered Bt brinjal in the Tangail district od Bangladesh .
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Afzal Hossain, a farmer in the Rangpur district in Bangladesh, proudly displays his harvest of genetically engineered Bt brinjal.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Michael Kamiya harvests genetically engineered disease-resistant papayas on his family's farm on Oahu, Hawaii.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Akhter Hossain of Bangladesh compares healthy potatoes (right) to potatoes infected with late blight fungus.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Sarah D. Evanega
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Close up of potato infected by late blight fungus.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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A banana plant genetically engineered to fight banana bacterial wilt is off to a healthy start.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Genetically engineered Bt brinjal (eggplant) grows at a seed production site in Bangladesh.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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A worker harvests genetically engineered, disease-resistant papaya on a family farm in Hawaii.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Seed collected from genetically engineered, insect resistant Bt brinjal will be shared with farmers in Bangladesh.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Genetically engineered ringspot resistant papaya are ready for harvest on Ken Kamiya's Oahu, Hawaii, farm.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Spotigy, the transgenic hornless cow, was created to avoid the practice of dehorning in the cattle industry. Credit: Alliance for Science
AFS_20150526_Iowa_259
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A cassava plant in Uganda shows signs of being infected with the cassava mosaic virus.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Ken Kamiya proudly displays genetically engineered ringspot resistant papaya, which he grows on his Oahu, Hawaii, farm.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Genetically engineered papaya are ready for harvest on the A&T Belmes Farm in Hawaii's Big Island Puna District.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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Genetically engineered Bt brinjal (BARI variety 2) are left to ripen for seed harvest at a Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute (C=BARI) regional research station in Patna, Bangladesh.
Credit: Alliance for Science
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