Biotechnology Summary Notes
Biotechnology Summary Notes
Selective Breeding
5000BC corn had small cobs and few Selective breeding: Mule was bred from the
kernels. 1500AD corn was large with lots female horse and male donkey. Mules
of kernels due to selective breeding. helped transport because of their strength
and endurance.
Fermentation: Microorganisms breakdown sugar in an anaerobic environment. This process was used
to make bread, wine and cheese.
Pasteurisation (developed after Mendel and Pasteur’s discoveries of biological processes): Remove
pathogens from food.
Social Implications
Benefits Disadvantages
Ethical Thoughts
Philosophy, culture and religion – biotechnology interrupts the natural balance.
Genetic abnormalities in embryos can be identified leaving parents with the choice to terminate
pregnancy. Ending life during pregnancy is controversial.
Legislations regarding biotechnologies have ‘grey areas’ e.g. who legally has access to private
information (employers, insurers etc.).
Biotechnology has unknown health effects = bad animal welfare e.g. transgenic pigs grow very
quickly which negatively impacts their joints.
E.g. gene therapy involves inserting healthy genes to replace defective genes.
E.g. stem cell research involves using unspecialised cells to replace diseased tissue with
healthy tissue.
New vaccines.
E.g. Current research: turn off gene in muscles to stop muscular dystrophy.
E.g. Current research: nanoparticles which contain anti-cancer drugs are being delivered to
cancer cells (without damaging healthy surrounding cells).
Higher quality/quantity food = improves nutrition
Genetically modified crops have favourable traits that make them disease/pest tolerant, more
efficient and better quality.
E.g. GM crops have genes that increase vitamin levels → helps malnutrition.
Decrease in biodiversity
GM crops involves selecting favourable traits and breeding them →fewer crop varieties → decreases
gene pool. If environmental change occurs an entire species could be wiped out because there is
limited variation → less food for growing population.
GM crops have had unexpected effects on native plants or soil microbes → decreases native
population → loss of biodiversity.
GM animals may interbreed with native populations that have the same gene (transgene) as the GM
animal → transgene becomes more abundant and other genes die out → decreases gene pool.
Conservation of biodiversity
GM crops → increased crop productivity without destroying large amount of land → reduces land
clearing → preserves habitats → conserves biodiversity.
GM crops can reintroduce genes that have died out → increases gene pool.
Genetic techniques can predict the genes of offspring → helps select individuals for breeding
programs → helps endangered species. E.g. Northern quolls are endangered and genetic
techniques help select which individuals to breed.
Artificial insemination and pollination introduce genes into a population → increases gene pool →
increases biodiversity.