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Genetically 7 F/ \! u' _# M
modified crops, we were promised, would deliver a second green revolution: a 3 T. i0 W% T) s: l
wealth of enhanced crops that would provide food to the starving, profits to
6 [0 N8 y' x2 D; ofarmers and a greener environment to boot. In many ways that revolution has 9 w4 A3 f: t8 L/ @# X. C# g+ d
arrived, but there have been setbacks and disappointments too. In this special issue, Nature charts the development of
3 T! k4 t3 B+ [3 v$ w5 P3 ]7 eGMO technology in the past three decades and looks for the green shoots that / H" j2 Z9 ^; [* ?
might form the basis of the next generation of GMOs. Cover: Kelly
7 @3 p* F/ x( n9 q5 d! @2 U4 f1 G4 Q8 MKrause/Nature (photo: Nagy-Bagoly Arpad/Shutterstock)
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