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The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently announced that the country's flower dealers have begun to destroy a large number of dwarf ox flowers.
the flowers were identified by scientists in the country as genetically modified to open up bright orange, red and purple flowers.
usDA said that while the flowers are not a risk to the environment or human health, GMOs require special permits to be sold in the United States.
to have imported or bred the plants without knowing they were genetically modified varieties.
, German horticultural company Selecta Klemm notified the USDA Animal and Plant Quarantine Service (APHIS) that genetically modified orange ox flowers had been exported to the United States.
said in a statement, "This allowed the USDA to test a number of ox-carrying flowers and eventually selected several genetically modified varieties."
dealers have begun voluntarily destroying genetically modified cow flowers.
said consumers who may have purchased genetically modified ordnance do not need to take any action, and that in the United States there are "no compatible wild close-up species, nor plant residues, and are not included in the scope of poisonous grasses".
flowers originated in Africa, Asia, Central America, Europe, South America and Australia.
, Finland and the European Union have also found genetically modified oxan flowers.
countries and regions are also prohibited from growing and selling genetically modified plants without permission.
Finnish authorities issued a ban on the sale of genetically modified oranges on April 27th, and the European Union has launched an investigation.
fact, oxchio is not the first genetically modified plant to appear in "should not appear" areas.
countries and governments often find crops such as genetically modified corn and soybeans without permission.
, the United States is also revising its regulations on biotechnology products.
using traditional chemical and radiation sources to alter DNA will be exempt from hybrid DNA from compatible species, according to a draft guidance issued by the U.S. Government.
addition, a spokesman for Finland's Food Safety Authority told the Telegraph that the agency suspected a gene from corn that gave the oxen flower an unusual color.
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