Restaurants could be 1st to get genetically modified salmon

Peter Bowyer, the facility manager at AquaBounty Technologies, holds one of the last batch of conventional Atlantic salmon raised at the commercial fish farm in Albany, Ind., Wednesday, June 19, 2019. AquaBounty will be producing the first genetically modified animals approved for human food in the U.S. and one way companies are pushing to transform plants and animals, as consumer advocacy groups call for greater caution. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

Peter Bowyer, the facility manager at AquaBounty Technologies, checks on the newly hatched Atlantic salmon in the first batch of bioengineered eggs in an incubation tray in Albany, Ind., Wednesday, June 19, 2019. The company, which already breeds the salmon in Canada, is incubating this first batch of bioengineered eggs and the first salmon fillets raised there would be ready in late 2020. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

NEW YORK — Inside an Indiana aquafarming complex, thousands of salmon eggs genetically modified to grow faster than normal are hatching into tiny fish. After growing to roughly 10 pounds in indoor tanks, they could be served in restaurants by late next year.