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What happened to make Roundup Ready & Roundup come to be?
What is Roundup Ready and what are the Roundup Ready crops? Roundup Ready, a trademark for a patent-protected line that contains genetically modified seeds that are resistant to herbicides Roundup is a term used to describe Roundup Ready. These are the crops that are known as Roundup Ready.

Roundup Was it really made up?
John Franz, Monsanto chemical chemist and first to discover that Roundup's active agent was glyphosate in 1970, was the first person to define it as a herbicide. The majority of herbicides employed in agriculture were pre-emergent. That means they were applied prior to the crops and plants grew. Glyphosate's capacity to control huge numbers of grass weeds and broadleafs was totally different. Its exceptional environmental properties (soil inactivation, rapid degradation, etc.) and toxicological properties (extremely minimal levels of toxicity to mammals as well as other beneficial species) resulted in a novel product.

When was ラウンドアップ that Roundup first launched?
ラウンドアップ (r), a broad-spectrum herbicide was first introduced to the market in 1974. It quickly became become the top-selling agricultural chemical. Roundup(r), originally, was employed in ditches on railroad tracks and in fields during growing seasons. ラウンドアップ allowed farmers to control broadleafweeds and grasses in the soil. In this manner they could decrease the need to tillage, preserve soil structure, and lessen soil erosion.

The Roundup Ready GMOs followed.
Monsanto scientists saw the potential benefits that Roundup(r) which is a recombinant DNA product might have for farmers after the breakthroughs made in the 1970s. Ernie Jaworski led a small team that included Steve Rogers, Rob Horsch and me to tackle the issue. In the early 1980s, this group had created the first techniques that allowed the introduction of specific genes into plants and our focus was now on developing virus-resistant insects resistant, Roundup-resistant crops.

It was known that Roundup may block the biochemical pathway plants utilize to produce aromatic amino acids. Roundup's high degree of protection for humans and mammals is due to the fact that glyphosate can be rapidly broken down by soil microorganisms. Our scientists discovered both plant and microbe genes that conferred herbicide tolerance. The USDA approved the first field tests of Roundup Ready plants in 1987. https://www.komeri.com/disp/CKmSfGoodsPageMain_001.jsp?GOODS_NO=1013169 was a genetically modified variety of Roundup-tolerant tomato plants. A few more years later, the Roundup Ready gene was identified and isolated.

Let's start with soybeans. The answers to the questions "What are Roundup Ready soybeans?" and "How are Roundup-Ready soybeans created?" will help us to understand the process of making soybeans. Roundup Ready Soybeans are genetically engineered soybeans which have had their DNA modified so that they are able to resist the herbicide glyphosate that is the active component in the herbicide Roundup. These soybeans are resistant to Roundup because every soybean seed has been injected with the Roundup-ready gene prior to planting. This allows farmers to spray their fields with Roundup Ready herbicides that destroy weeds but not the crops.

As you can observe, the introduction of Roundup Ready crops in 1996 changed farming and agricultural science! Roundup resistance was quickly accepted by farmers. ラウンドアップ over 90 percent of U.S. soybean, cotton fields and canola fields utilize biotech-based traits that allow the herbicide to be tolerant. Apart from reducing and improving weed control methods that increased yields for crops Roundup Ready crops cut down on the need to tilde and also reduced the cost of equipment and allowed for easier harvests due to "cleaner areas" with fewer weeds. The increase in the utilization of conservation tillage can be a significant environmental benefit. By cutting down on plowing, farmers cut down on the amount of energy used and also GHG emissions while maintaining soil structure and reducing erosion. In 2013 this was equivalent to the removal of 28 billion kilos of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. This is equal to removing 12.4 million cars off the road for a single year (Source: PG Economics).
My Website: http://www.greenjapan.co.jp/roundup_max.htm
     
 
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