CASE PHOTOS Exploring Bioethics Module 6 Day 1
CASE PHOTOS Exploring Bioethics Module 6, Day 1 Copyright © 2009 Education Development Center, Inc.
Photo: Courtesy Eduardo Kac, GFP Bunny, 2000, transgenic artwork. Alba, the fluorescent rabbit Albino rabbit with jellyfish genes.
Photo: Courtesy ©i. Stockphoto. com/filo Mice genetically engineered to have Parkinson’s disease.
Photo: Courtesy ©i. Stockphoto. com/onfilm Chicks with dyed feathers.
Photo: Courtesy Charles A. Vacanti Mouse with ear scaffolding surgically implanted on its back.
Photo: Courtesy ©i. Stockphoto. com/Ceneri Giant panda with baby.
Photo: Reprinted by permission from Macmillan Publishers Ltd: NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY, "Cloned transchromosomic calves producing human immunoglobulin" 20(9), 889 -894, copyright 2002 Four calves cloned to produce human immunoglobulin.
Photo: Courtesy USDA This progressive brain-wasting disease causes weakness and loss of balance.
Photo: Courtesy ©i. Stockphoto. com/semenovlgor The female Anopheles mosquito can carry and transmit the malaria parasite.
Photo: Courtesy ©i. Stockphoto. com/pegasus. M Purebred sheep dog.
Photo: Courtesy ©i. Stockphoto. com/esemelwe Sheep being sheared.
Photo: Courtesy Nexia Biotechnologies Ltd. Genetically engineered goats with spider-silk-making genes.
Photo: Courtesy Huntsman Marine Science Centre The three fish on top have been genetically engineered and are larger than the bottom fish of the same age.
Photo: Courtesy ©i. Stockphoto. com/steverts Male calves, confined in pens, being raised for veal.
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