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===Genetic engineering=== Starting in 2000, rice was experimentally genetically engineered to produce higher than normal [[beta-carotene]] content, giving it a yellow/orange color. The product is referred to as [[golden rice]] (''Oryza sativa'').<ref name="grp">{{cite web | title=The Golden Rice Project | website=The Golden Rice Project | date=18 July 2018 | url=http://www.goldenrice.org/index.php | access-date=14 February 2019}}</ref><ref name="Federico">{{cite book | last1=Federico | first1=M. L. | last2=Schmidt | first2=M. A. | title=Carotenoids in Nature | chapter=Modern Breeding and Biotechnological Approaches to Enhance Carotenoid Accumulation in Seeds | series=Subcellular Biochemistry | volume=79 | year=2016 | isbn=978-3-319-39124-3 | issn=0306-0225 | pmid=27485229 | doi=10.1007/978-3-319-39126-7_13 | pages=345β358}}</ref> Biofortified [[sweet potato]], maize, and [[cassava]] were other crops introduced to enhance the content of beta-carotene and certain minerals.<ref name="talsma">{{cite journal | last1=Talsma | first1=Elise F | last2=Melse-Boonstra | first2=Alida | last3=Brouwer | first3=Inge D | title=Acceptance and adoption of biofortified crops in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review | journal=Nutrition Reviews | publisher=Oxford University Press (OUP) | volume=75 | issue=10 | date=14 September 2017 | issn=0029-6643 | pmid=29028269 | pmc=5914320 | doi=10.1093/nutrit/nux037 | pages=798β829}}</ref><ref name="mejia">{{cite journal | last1=Mejia | first1=Luis A. | last2=Dary | first2=Omar | last3=Boukerdenna | first3=Hala | s2cid=4834726 | title=Global regulatory framework for production and marketing of crops biofortified with vitamins and minerals | journal=Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | publisher=Wiley | volume=1390 | issue=1 | date=1 October 2016 | issn=0077-8923 | pmid=27801985 | doi=10.1111/nyas.13275 | pages=47β58| doi-access=free }}</ref> When eaten, beta-carotene is a [[provitamin]], converted to retinol (vitamin A). The concept is that in areas of the world where vitamin A deficiency is [[endemic|common]], growing and eating this rice would reduce the rates of vitamin A deficiency, particularly its effect on childhood vision problems.<ref name=grp/> As of 2018, fortified golden crops were still in the process of government approvals,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://irri.org/news/media-releases/golden-rice-meets-food-safety-standards-in-three-global-leading-regulatory-agencies|title=International Rice Research Institute β IRRI β Golden Rice meets food safety standards in three global leading regulatory agencies|work=International Rice Research Institute β IRRI|access-date=30 May 2018|language=en-gb}}</ref> and were being assessed for taste and education about their health benefits to improve acceptance and adoption by consumers in impoverished countries.<ref name=talsma/>
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