View allAll Photos Tagged GeneticEngineering

Adult tsetse flies are immobilized at low temperatures and the sexes can then easily be separated. Male tsetse flies (shown here) have prominent external claspers for holding the female during mating. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Pamela Ronald, a professor of plant pathology at UC Davis, discusses the successes of genetically engineered food, as well as its implications for safely and efficiently increasing agricultural supplies. photography by kris krüg

  

Moges Hidoto, a Fellow, from Ethiopia examining bacteria preparations under the microscope at IAEA entomology unit at Seibersdorf. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

An agricultural research technician performs a Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) procedure to determine the presence of alleles or genes with known function or importance.

Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI).

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Brown pupae males and white pupae females at different container shows the preparation for flight ability test. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Work for the CGIAR's Roots, Tubers & Bananas Research Program in East Africa.

 

Credit: ©2012CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

(107mm wide by 144mm deep). February 12, 2010 -- Former President Bill Clinton, who had quadruple bypass surgery more than five years ago, has had a clogged heart artery opened after suffering discomfort in his chest. In an angioplasty procedure, two stents – tiny steel scaffolds – were placed inside the artery to help the flow of blood. Graphic shows angioplasty procedure. KEYWORDS: Hospital, doctor, medicine, ambulance, emergency, health, surgery, rescue, population, drug, dosing, reference, medical database, clinic, pills, tonic, genetic engineering, genetics,medicine, nursing, anatomy, cytology, pre-clinical, angioplasty procedure, heart, artery, blood vessel.

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Ringiers farbige Kinderbücher / Kinderbuchserie

> Ringgi + Zofi / Spannende Abenteuer in Genikon

von Robi Reinfrank und Röbu Schnieper

Ringier & Co AG / Zürich 1988

ex libris MTP

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringgi_und_Zofi

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Entomology technician Rudi Boigner with a cage of tsetse flies. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Tsetse fly adults in a cage. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Work for the CGIAR's Roots, Tubers & Bananas Research Program in East Africa.

 

Credit: ©2012CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Work for the CGIAR's Roots, Tubers & Bananas Research Program in East Africa.

 

Credit: ©2012CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

The work of CIAT's Agrobiodiversity Research Area.

 

Credit: ©2017 CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Ringiers farbige Kinderbücher / Kinderbuchserie

> Ringgi + Zofi / Spannende Abenteuer in Genikon

von Robi Reinfrank und Röbu Schnieper

Ringier & Co AG / Zürich 1988

ex libris MTP

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringgi_und_Zofi

Work for the CGIAR's Roots, Tubers & Bananas Research Program in East Africa.

 

Credit: ©2012CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Laboratory technician Viwat Wornoayporn shows the adult fruit fly colony cage. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Laboratory technician Viwat Wornoayporn checking the emergence rate of fruit fly. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Pamela Ronald, a professor of plant pathology at UC Davis, discusses the successes of genetically engineered food, as well as its implications for safely and efficiently increasing agricultural supplies. photography by kris krüg

  

My most complex Mittigation so far.

I woke up with the idea of rewriting America the beautiful then took it to the next level.

Thanks to the original copyright holders of the two images used in this piece of satire.

Romney wants to de regulate polluting industries, that will not make America beautiful.

 

America the beautiful?

 

O Smoggy polluted skies,

For fields of GMO,

For mining mountain majesties

Above the desert plain!

America! America!

Mitt took His cash from thee,

And crown thy rich, the greed is good

From sea to oil slicked sea!

 

See more of my anti Mitt humor here: www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10150466287981104.36424...

The bacteria are spread on a glass microscope slide for Gram staining as part of the identification. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Documenting the impact of improved climbing beans in Rwanda.

 

Credit: ©2011CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

is this what all mice would look like if they had no hair? I dont believe they could be that wrinkly. I think this one is getting on in his years maybe.

Ringiers farbige Kinderbücher / Kinderbuchserie

> Ringgi + Zofi / Spannende Abenteuer in Genikon

von Robi Reinfrank und Röbu Schnieper

Ringier & Co AG / Zürich 1988

ex libris MTP

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringgi_und_Zofi

Entomology researcher Janis Thailayil screening pupae (Anopheles arabiensis) for GFP expression. The pupae are selected on the basis of their sex. (IAEA Entomology Unit, Seibersdort, Austria, 1 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Entomology technician Rudi Boigner checking a trolley of tsetse fly cages. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Brachiaria forage grass, which has excellent BNI properties and could help reduce the need for nitrogen fertilizer in agriculture.

 

Credit: ©2009CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Entomology Technician Hasim Mohammed spread blood over the surface of the sheep-blood agar with a sterile spreader. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

More scary facts about GMO Food.

Entomology technician Rudi Boigner checking tsetse pupae. (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Bean breeding at CIAT in Kawanda, Uganda.

 

Credit: ©2009CIAT/NeilPalmer

Please credit accordingly and leave a comment when you use a CIAT photo.

For more info: ciat-comunicaciones@cgiar.org

Fruit fly brown pupae male only (genetic sexing strain). (Entomology Unit, Seibersdorf, Austria, 2 June 2006)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

A laboratory technician examines a tsetse fly at the Entomology unit at Seibersdorf. (IAEA Seibersdorf, Austria, 4 August 2000)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

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