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What is Roundup Ready?
What is Roundup Ready, and what are Roundup Ready varieties? Roundup Ready refers to a trademarked line of genetically altered crop seeds that are resistant to Roundup. These are referred to as Roundup Ready crops.

Roundup was invented by who?
Glyphosate, which is the active ingredient in Roundup, was first discovered to be an herbicide in the year 1970 by Monsanto Chemist John Franz. Most herbicides available at the time were preemergent. They were applied prior to the growth of the crop and the weeds. Glyphosate's capacity to control huge amounts of grass weeds as well as broadleafs was totally different. Its extraordinary environmental properties (soil inactivation, rapid degradation, etc.) and toxicological qualities (extremely low levels of toxicity to mammals as well as other beneficial species) made it a revolutionary product.

When was the Roundup first introduced?
Roundup (r) was launched on the market in 1974. It's an herbicide with a wide range that soon became a world market leader. It was initially utilized in ditches, on railroads and on fields during growing seasons. This helped farmers manage the grass and broadleaf wild weeds that were growing in the soil. It also decreased the need to till and preserved the soil structure.

https://www.zennoh.or.jp/eigi/research/pdf/gr334_06.pdf The Roundup Ready GMOs followed.
Spurred by the incredible breakthroughs in Recombinant DNA technology in the 1970s, Monsanto scientists recognized the numerous benefits for farmers who benefited if Roundup(r) could be directly applied on growing crops to manage weeds in their fields. Ernie Jaworski, Rob Horsch, Steve Rogers, and I started working on this issue. The team created the first method to introduce genetic to plant species in the early 1980s. We then began to work on creating virus resistant plants, insect resistant and Roundup-tolerant.

It was established that Roundup glyphosate impeded plant's capacity to make aromatic amino acids. Roundup's high degree of mammalian safety is due to this fact. ラウンドアップ Glyphosate was also quickly broken down in the soil by microorganisms. In the late 1980s, our researchers had identified the genes of both microbial and plant species that increased tolerance to herbicides through laboratory testing. In 1987, the USDA approved the first field test of Roundup Ready plants. This Roundup-resistant crop was genetically modified tomatoes that proved resistant to Roundup. ラウンドアップ ラウンドアップ After a few years, the Roundup Ready trait, which was the bacteria genetic, was isolated and introduced to other crops.

Let's begin with soybeans. The answers to the questions "What are Roundup Ready soybeans?" ラウンドアップ and "How are Roundup-Ready soybeans made?" ラウンドアップ will help us to understand the process of making soybeans. ラウンドアップ Roundup Ready Soybeans are soybeans genetically engineered which have had their DNA modified so that they can withstand the herbicide glyphosate, which is the main component in the herbicide Roundup. They are able to withstand Roundup because every soybean seed has been infected with the Roundup-ready gene prior to its planting. This means farmers can spray their fields using the herbicide and not harm their crops.

ラウンドアップ Roundup Ready crop introductions in 1996 have had a major impact on agriculture science. Farmers soon realized the advantages of Roundup resistance, and the adoption rate was very rapid (today more than 90% of U.S. soybean cotton, corn, and canola acres use a biotech trait for resistance to herbicides). Along with simplifying and improving the effectiveness of weed control systems 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 fields" with less herbicides. A major environmental benefit has been the rise in adoption of conservation cultivation: farmers are able to reduce their energy consumption as well as GHG emissions. They can also preserve soil structure, while also preserving soil structure. In 2013, this was equivalent to removing 28 billion kilograms of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere or equivalent to removing 12.4 million cars from the road for a single year (Source: PG Economics).
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