Cenozoic Park: Cloning the Tasmanian Tiger 385
Mirk writes "The
Australian Museum
reports a breakthrough in their plans to clone the Tasmanian Tiger. The ``tiger'', actually a carnivorous marsupial, became extinct in 1936, when the last known
specimen died in captivity. Er, did I say ``extinct''?
Now it looks like what everyone thought was an extinction may be
``a 70-year hiccup'', to quote the press release. The museum's Evolutionary Biology Unit have successfully replicated individual Tasmanian Tiger genes using a process known as
PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction)."
I really hope (Score:3, Insightful)
Just because you can do something, doesn't mean you should.
Re:I really hope (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I really hope (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I really hope (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't think there is much wrong in correcting a past mistake.
Re:I really hope (Score:2)
Look at the introduction of 'foreign' species... (Score:5, Insightful)
Take Hawaii (okay, share it with the rest of us
Or to quote my favorite Jeff Goldblum line:
"You were so busy trying to see if you could do it that you didn't stop to think about whether you should."
Re:Look at the introduction of 'foreign' species.. (Score:2, Funny)
Lisa: But isn't that a bit short-sighted? What happens when we're overrun by lizards?
Skinner: No problem. We simply release wave after wave of Chinese needle snakes. They'll wipe out the lizards.
Lisa: But aren't the snakes even worse?
Skinner: Yes, but we're prepared for that. We've lined up a fabulous type of gorilla that thrives on snake meat.
Lisa: But then we're stuck with gorillas!
Skinner: No, that's the beautiful part. When wintertime rolls around, the gorillas simply freeze to death.
This one certainly did (Score:2)
There are still occasional sightings of dog-like critters where the Thylacine roamed, but they are probably foxes.
The recently deceased David Fleay was particularly proud of, among other things, breeding platypus and having a big scar on his bum from when he was bitten by a Thylacine.
Re:I really hope (Score:4, Insightful)
As another poster pointed out, the Tasmanian Tiger was in fact hunted to extinction (or possibly near-extinction, but recent sightings in the wild are unconfirmed) by humans -- there's no doubt about that. But that's not really the point. The real point is that whether or not an animal is "fit to survive in this world" is determined by one thing and one thing only, and that is, well, survival. If an animal goes extinct, for whatever reason, it is unfit. If it comes back, in any manner, it is by definition fit again. It's really that simple.
Many varieties of domesticated animals, from housecats to beef cattle, have been bred to be so different from their wild ancestors that the species would have significant trouble surviving without humans around to take care of them. Does this mean they're unfit? Of course not. It means they're perfectly fit for our current, human-dominated world.
Re:I really hope (Score:4, Informative)
His statement makes perfect sense, you just have trouble accepting it.
-- this is not a
Re:I really hope (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Definition: FIT (Score:2)
They'ld never survive... (Score:2)
These particular animals were exterminated because they were pests. Even the 70yrs they've been out of commision is probably enough to keep them surviving again in the wild.
But then again, just the other day, here in the Boston area I saw my first coyote. Go figure...
Re:I really hope (Score:2)
Yes, just think of the Pygmy Shrew [pox.co.uk]!
Re:I really hope (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I really hope (Score:2, Insightful)
Bottom line: We're not influencing the system, we're part of it.
(sub-bottom-line: The question of whether we want the Tas. Tiger in our world is a different one, but don't claim we shouldn't because of a 'sin against evolution'.)
A complete misunderstanding of natural history (Score:5, Insightful)
Fitness to survive in the world has nothing to do with it. A meteor falls, and everything with a body mass greater than 100kg dies out. Were the larger animals less fit? A volcano erupts. A species dies. A flood wipes out a nesting ground. Chalk up another one. Human sailors bring in rats, goats and row plants, destroying practically all native flora and fauna of whole island chains.
Were any of these things destroyed because they were less fit? Of course not. If your building catches on fire, are the survivors more "fit" or are they simply lucky enough to be working on the first floor?
Despite the pitifully bad dialog of Jurassic Park, natural history does not represent some featureless plain on which species struggle against each other and the best win out. Catastrophes happen. Climates make sudden, radical shifts. Disease runs rampant. New vegetation suites are established. Chance is everywhere.
And chance is all it takes. Abandon any idea that the creatures you see around you are "better" than what came before. Different? Sure. Better? By what standards? They're here because of chance built on chance, built on chance. Feedback loops tend to enforce the status quo, keeping many species stable over millions of years (a feature generally absent for the last 12,000 years) but the best predator on Earth can't live if all the prey die and forest dwellers die when the forest goes bye.
The Thylacine happened to be a predator on an island where humans decided to raise sheep. It was fully "fit" in the environment before this point. Afterwards, it was "unfit" in the sense that it's hide was not bulletproof and it had an unfortunate predilection for traps.
Should we worry about the return of extinct species? At some point, yes, but not because some anthropomorphic "nature" selected them for extinction. We should worry because these creatures may be all too "fit" and have behaviors, breeding strategies, or feeding habits that are exceptionally successful in a modern setting.
Do you oppose the return of Grey Wolves to the Yellowstone Basin, or the reintroduction of Grizzlies to their historic range? Like the thylacine, these are creatures that have been absent from these territories for multiple generations. And the areas to which they are being "returned" have often experienced radical changes in the intervening years. Watching the ups and downs of these "reintroduction" projects should give us a good preview of the pitfalls to avoid when someone wants to put just a few Mastadons in Missouri.
Insightful? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I really hope (Score:2)
Hey now!! I work for Valeo! [valeoinc.com] Of COURSE Fitness is a goal! :P
Re:I really hope (Score:2)
And without GIANT METEOR involvement the dinosaurs would still be alive, too fucking bad. Species go extinct all the time, it's not a big deal. These little buggers apparently didn't occupy any critical niche in the ecosystem since the system hasn't collapsed without them. There is no reason to bring them back for any reason other than study.
Kintanon
Wow... (Score:5, Funny)
Why bother? (Score:2, Funny)
Tiger, not devil (Score:4, Funny)
Tasmanian tiger, not Tasmanian devil. In the future, please pay more attention to the details; they're important.
A very nice solution (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:A very nice solution (Score:3, Informative)
That said, the chances of mutation from breeding two related individuals may be higher than those of unrelated individuals, but they are not absolute certainties. Some degree of variation can be recovered, and while that may not be a huge amount of variation, it's more than they've currently got.
Now if they can do the same thing with the dodo (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Now if they can do the same thing with the dodo (Score:2)
You'd have to clone him too, since he's already dead.
Environmentalists should be pissed... (Score:3, Interesting)
Environmental activism is supposed to be all about preserving "Earth's delicate balance," of which extinction is a natural, and vital process.
But, of course, they'll overlook that if it means injecting a cutesy-woosty puddy-tat back into a wild that no longer finds the critter-witter necessary, because we got one over on the evil-weevil human beings.
*shrug*
Re:Environmentalists should be pissed... (Score:2)
We've hunted species to extinction, both for our protection, and for our mere convenience. Dire wolves, for example. We almost hunted the Elk to extinction, but now they're a big pain in the ass again due to management efforts. Likewise buffalo, which you can buy in ground form in many restaurants, in a bun with a little produce and some sauces.
So bringing back any species which humanity has clearly driven to extinction (I don't know if this is one of them) is well within the bounds of environmental activism.
Re:Environmentalists should be pissed... (Score:2)
You're only correct in regard to the simplistic interpretation of environmentalism - an interpretation that I think is doing more harm than good, because it is so easily ignored. As it should be.
Environmentalism is really an activist viewpoint on ecological balance. The idea is to keep in mind that the function of our environment - and therefore our own function - is extremely complex. It's far too complex for us to model. In this way, environmentalism is a very *conservative* (hey, conservation!) position. "Better safe than sorry" could be the primary mission statement.
The point is just that we really don't know what's going to result from our actions, and so we'd best come at the whole problem scientifically, carefully. Knee-jerk, reactionary thought is as big a problem within the environmental movement as it is without.
So, repetitively: environmentalism is a logical extension of scientific method.
I'm really getting sick of otherwise intelligent people assuming that there is no logical basis for environmentalism simply because they associate it with stupid and often quite stinky people.
Environmentalists probably are pissed... (Score:2)
Ever heard of something called the Precautionary Principle [ratical.org]? It's a risk/hazard assessment method becoming common (it's already law for certain things in the EU) for environmental (and other) use around the world, and it looks at ways of minimizing risks, hazards, and above all, harm, which is really what environmentalism is about, not a bleeding-heart slavish devotion to "cute."
As for myself, speaking as at least some kind of an environmentalist, I'm not sure injecting extinct animals back into the ecosystem (which is a very heavy system, go read your systems theory again) is a good idea. At best, it should only happen after a thorough risk/hazard assessment, including long-term second and onward order results modelling, and then only if there's no "reasonable doubt."
On the bright side, it doesn't look as though they're far enough along with this project to warrant serious paranoia...yet.
Oh, and...the thing wasn't a "puddy tat." It was a carnivorous marsupial; hardly the kind of thing I'd want in my bed, and probably not (judging by other marsupials) cute in the least, and it probably got the name "tiger" because of the non-cute tiger-like traits it had (hunting, killing, perhaps?). So, please, a little credit?
Re:Environmentalists should be pissed... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Environmentalists should be pissed... (Score:2)
Now that I agree with. Humans are a part of the environment, therefore, our impact on the environment is natural.
But, of course, they'll overlook that if it means injecting a cutesy-woosty puddy-tat back into a wild that no longer finds the critter-witter necessary, because we got one over on the evil-weevil human beings.
That's a little over-stated, but humans did HUNT them to extention. I don't feel we have a moral responsibility to save/regenerate the species, but I think this is the closest case to it
Now, aren't Kangaroo's major pests? Can these things live on Kangaroo's?
If they're that fierce, maybe they can help with the deer population problems [jsonline.com] in Wisconsin :)
Re:Wrong!! Mod Parent DOWN! (Score:2)
Kintanon
uh oh.... (Score:2)
Cloning (Score:2, Funny)
"The corner stone that the builders left out is the corner stone on which I build my church." said the Man.
Not quite a tiger... (Score:5, Insightful)
(1) No mention of the increasing research into why cloning large mammals if more difficult than thought. See recent New Scientist magazines for pop coverage.
(2) No mention of host animals. The Tiger can't be brought back whole and entire, something needs to act as a host - 90% close relative, 10% recovered DNA. Then work up.
(3) No mention of gene pools and viable population sizes. Pick one human - clone a breeding population from them. Fancy working with them? Didn't think so.
Still, interesting project!
Tassie devil (Score:3, Informative)
The Tassie devil has been suggested as a host. The big advantage for the thylacine, and the reason why it will probably be the first successful recovery, is that it is a marsupial, which means it is born when it is basically still a foetus. This means that the host animal can be kept on immunosuppressants for the short duration of pregnancy without rejecting the embyo or getting too screwed up itself. Something like a mammoth, on the other hand, would need to be carried for 18 months inside what would end up being a very sick elephant.
Re:Not quite a tiger... (Score:2)
Ooh, ooh, I pick Natalie Portman. So, yes, I do. ;-)
Re:Not quite a tiger... (Score:2)
First, it's not a tiger, it's a marsupial with stripes (hence the Tiger moniker), related to the Tasmanian Devil.
Second, the article talks about using a Tasmanian Devil as a potential host animal, after stripping out the genes specific to the Tasmanian Devil from the egg cell.
It doesn't talk about gene pools or population sizes, however there are several of the animals completely preserved, and that's a LOT of genetic material to work with.
--brian
That could be a solution... (Score:2)
If this is not possible, use cloning techniques... and try to work out the bugs of the cloning process (rapid aging, damaged genes, etc...).
Wait until the ecological situation in the region of the endangered animal is back to normal (or as near normal as possible), "reproduce" the animal in a compatible donor, or a genetically-engineered one if no compatible donors are available. Re-introduce several cloned members of the specie. After a while, you should have restored "lost" species and ecological diversity.
And the best thing is, you can do this even more easily with plants.
I think this is much more interesting than freezing your own brain for posterity. Probably a much better use of genetics than GMOs...
Re:That could be a solution... (Score:3, Insightful)
Or we could:
a) Manage wildlife conservation at a reasonable level. (Control poaching, destruction of environment, etc).
b) Accept that fact that species become extinct, regardless of whether by human hands or not. Why bring them back just for the sake of doing it. (See Jurassic Park for an extreme example).
We should never mess with nature. Something as simple as introducing a new species in a different environment has caused havok around the world. (Like Zebra mussels in the great lakes). Can you imagine some genetically altered species roaming around, interbreeding and the like?
We can't even get rid of Zebra mussels, this is an ecological nightmare waiting to happen!
Apologies to Blake. (Score:4, Interesting)
In the test tubes of the night,
What immortal laborat'ry
Could frame thy fearful symmetry?
Sorry.
k.
Re:Apologies to Blake. (Score:2)
Re:Apologies to Blake. (Score:2)
Nice work, otherwise.
One thing worse than cloning extinct animals... (Score:5, Funny)
Hmmm... (Score:2)
It's Not A Tiger - And It May Not Even Be Extinct! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:It's Not A Tiger - And It May Not Even Be Extin (Score:2)
Marsupials, Mammals and Placentas (Score:2)
Re:Marsupials, Mammals and Placentas (Score:2)
A warning and a warning (Score:3, Interesting)
Could this be classified as the dead rising from the grave...?
For the atheologically inclined:
The theologically inclined will be thinking this...
Re:A warning and a warning (Score:2)
but then the phrase "dead rising from the grave" could be easily open to such an interpretation given the amount of translation that has gone into it.
Not only words must be translated but also cultural meanings.
If such a thing were witnessed by someone of those times it would indeed seem to fit how they would describe it...
I'm not saying your wrong.. I'm just saying yours is but one interpretation of many interpretations of a meaning.
Is it really extinct? (Score:3, Interesting)
"The Tasmanian Tiger , also called the Tasmanian Wolf, is a large marsupial native to Tasmania. Most scientists believe it to be extinct, however each year there are about a dozen unconfirmed sightings in remote areas of the state, and several reported sets of Tiger tracks."
Australia is down... here's Yahoo! (Score:2)
Extinct Tasmanian Tiger One Step Closer to Cloning [yahoo.com]
Since that poor Australian server just got completely and utterly flamed... :(
somehow I dont think this is cloneing (Score:3, Informative)
you need a host egg and the actual DNA I would like to see them synthsize it but somehow I dont think so
regards
john jones
Choosing Species (Score:2, Insightful)
1. Is the animal extinct today due to human interference?
2. Can the animal re-establish itself in todays ecology?
3. Is it practical to re-introduce the animal back into the wild?
If the answer to all of these major questions (and many more minor questions) is yes, then I can see no good reason not to undo the damage humans have caused to these species.
You missed one (Score:4, Funny)
4. Does it taste good ?
Re:Choosing Species (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Choosing Species (Score:2)
But some people would argue that mankind is the Microsoft of the ecosystem
A tricky undertaking (Score:3, Insightful)
The breakthrough here is that PCR confirmed that there was very little damage to the ethanol preserved specimen. The next step is that they are planning on using PCR amplified DNA to "rebuild" the genome of the Tasmanian Tiger. To my knowledge, all other cloning involves injecting cell nuclei into oocytes (eggs). This has the advantage of preserving genes in the proper context. This is probably not possible with the preserved specimens.
Trying to re-build the entire Tasmanian Tiger genome, essentially from scratch, to produce artificial chromosomes is a huge undertaking - by the researcher's estimates, this could take 10-15 years.
Re:A tricky undertaking (Score:2)
One thing I can see happening from a full blown attempt to recreate an animal from its' DNA like this, is a vast amount of knowledge gained into the workings & preservation of dna in general - knowledge which can be put to use preserving genetic info from any species. Humans are a bit like that, we seem to work best when there's a goal, and one encompassing a wide amount of technologies like this is just the thing
If nothing is eventually created, or a creature which became extinct 'for a reason' lives again in some form, the ability to preserve genetic information in a form that's usable in the future could be a bonus - it doesn't really seem to me like tasmania is going to be overrun by tigers in a hundred years
a grrl & her server [danamania.com]
How PCR works (b/c I'm bored) (Score:5, Informative)
DNA, as I'm sure we all know, is double stranded. One strand is a complement of the other. A complements T and C complements G. So, if one strand is:
5' ATTTC 3'
then the other strand is:
3' TAAAG 5'
The DNA is "read" from 5' to 3'. 5' and 3' refer to particular atoms on the sugar backbone that are attached to one another via a phosphate.
When DNA is replicated, you split it into two strands:
5' ATTTC 3' and 5' GAAAT 3'
(notice that the two complements read in opposite directions)
and each strand has it's complement added.
5' ATTTC 3' and 5' GAAAT 3'
3' TAAAG 3' and 3' CTTTA 5'
The problem with this is, in order for this happen to DNA, you need an RNA "primer." This primer is a complement to the beggining of what you want to replicate. So, for example, if you have (RNA bases I'm putting in bold. U is the same as T:)
UAA
floating around in solution, which compliments ATT, then any sequence beggining with ATT will be replicated, but other sequences will NOT be replicated, because no RNA primer is available to get them started.
So, if you have a whole mess of DNA, including a piece that you're interested in, which reads:
5' ATTTG (long space........) TCGTC 3'
3' TAAAC (long space........) AGGAG 5'
and you add:
TAAAC and TCGTC
You get a chain reaction; the sequence flanked by the complements of the two things you add (the sequence printed above) is replicated, and then the replication product is replicated, and so on and so on. Other sequences, which are flanked by only one compliment (only ATTTG, say) will be replicated occasionally, but there replication products cannot in turn replicate, so you get no chain reaction.
More history here [berkeley.edu].
A thermophile (heat loving organism), thermus aquaticus, provided a polymerase [whyfiles.org] (an enzyme which polymerises, that is to say replicates sequences of, nucleic acids like DNA and RNA) that works extremely fast at high temperatures. In general, the higher the temperature you run a reaction at, the faster it goes. However, most biological enzymes (from, say, a person) cease to function when temperatures rise (this is one of the ways heat kills you.) Thermophiles, bacteria that live in geysers and in volcanic ocean vents, have evolved enzymes that continue to function at higher temperatures.
Re:How PCR works (b/c I'm bored) (Score:2)
If CTAATGT binds to GATTACA, then what happens when you throw an invalid U-gene into the mix?
Hint: all this craziness leads to the eventual demise of Law.
Why RNA? (Score:2, Informative)
I believe that's how it was done, back when PCR was invented (back in 1985 or so) but nowadays, no one uses RNA as primers without a very good reason to do so. Why? RNA is unstable, and you have RNAses (enzymes that break up RNA) on your hands, in your spit, everywhere
What's used today is short oligonucleotides as primers. These are short, single-stranded DNA stretches that are synthesized by a chemical process and subsequently purified. They are available from commercial suppliers at something like 50 cent a base.
Re:How PCR works (b/c I'm bored) (Score:3, Funny)
Yes Alex, I'd like to buy a vowel...
Also see SMH (Score:3, Informative)
Preserved in... (Score:2)
So... that would be beer-battered Tasmanian Tiger pup? Mmmm good!
Killer tomatoes (Score:2, Funny)
What's to stop them (Score:2)
Couple More Species (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd sure like it if a couple of species would return to existence that were obliterated earlier.
Two examples from the last several hundred years include the great auk and the passenger pigeon.
Two examples of species that humankind hunted to extinction (since they were such wonderful food sources) include the woolly mammoth and the giant sloth.
I recall an historical account of the last great auk being killed so that it could be stuffed and placed in the British museum. The collectors also took pains to destroy the last eggs in the nest at the same time. Gives you some idea of how much our views of what is fitting and proper for us to do in the world can change over a few hundred years.
Now that there are so many of us humans in a finite sized world, and our technological means of changing the world are more influential, it behoves us to give more and more thought to the consequences of our actions.
It's really only our capability for reasoning and thought that gives us a chance of beating the other animals for long term survival of our species.
Re:Couple More Species (Score:2)
a bit short on substance (Score:2, Insightful)
Assume for a moment that they are exceptionally lucky and have an intact genome from two individuals, one male and one female. The scientists then pass the substantial hurdle of cloning these individuals (no marsupials have been cloned yet). What do they have: two individuals. This would amount to a 'population bottleneck' of the worst magnitude. Who will these animals' offspring mate with?
Stephen Jay Gould? (Score:2)
Did he ever mention this project in any of his other books? DiaH is the only book I've read so far...
Ultimately futile (Score:2)
Attempting to stop time and preserve all existing species at a specific point in time is a truly futile act.
Wooly Mammoth? (Score:2)
Anyways, I remember them saying they were going to try to extract some DNA from the beast and then close it. Anybody have any information on that project?
Not a big concern (Score:2)
Creating remote controlled animals [economist.com] and therefore taking away what them BE, should account for more concern.
Big hurdles still to come (Score:2, Interesting)
Sure you can amplify bits of DNA from the thylacine (aka Tasmanian tiger).
You might be able to reconstruct the entire genome, or at least reconstruct the coding part of it exactly and the non-coding parts of it (like junk DNA) closely enough to work.
But you still have two hurdles:
I think any information we can get about the thylacine is worth getting, but don't hold your breath for results ...
Uhh, this science has a long way to go... (Score:2)
The technology to do this is really in its infancy. Few other, if any, organisms have been prepared this way (to my knowledge), including the lowly bacteria (several orders of magnitude easier). The only research I know of that really has had success is the reduction of E.coli genome as published recently in Genome Research.
I highly doubt that we understand the marsupial genome enough to assemble it together in a way that will "work" (an enormous project by itself). This all has to be performed before the difficult cloning event (cloning the "artificial" genome into another working host cell).
While I believe the technology will be available, it will be a long time before we actually see this projects completion. To get there it is going to require a lot of grunt work. And unlike programming, bugs will be *very* difficult to weed out. If it doesn't work it might be because gene #1 and gene #23,423 aren't next to each other. How would you find this out? I applaud the effort, but I think we need to have a model of this technology on a simpler organism (not extinct) before anyone should spend crap loads of $$$ on a potential dead end.
-Sean
Re:As much as I want to be happy about this... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:As much as I want to be happy about this... (Score:2)
Not necessarily, no. Sometimes there's not a reason for it. Evolution is a messy process, not some all-knowing entity that always picks correctly which species "should" live and which "should" die.
We're already a major influence within the process because of our clumsiness. With some careful forethought -- for a change -- maybe we can be a positive influence. Bringing a specific specie back isn't necessarily a good idea, but it would definitely be a good thing to develop the option.
Re:As much as I want to be happy about this... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:As much as I want to be happy about this... (Score:2)
Re:As much as I want to be happy about this... (Score:2, Informative)
Please tell me how an animal that was hunted to (supposed) extinction is poorly adapted? It's a predator, not a fast-reproducing herbivorous animal with a low gestation time and large number of offspring - EXACTLY the kind of species that is most vulnerable to extinction via humans.
Now, there are valid concerns here in this case, most of them being technical, IMHO. Chromosomal damage from the ethanol, the task of repairing said chromosomes, host-animal interactions, and the genetic defects and abnormal growth patterns seen in other mammalian cloning efforts are all hurdles. In addition, there is the question of the genetic diversity of a founder population being enough to maintain a viable population in the future. As to the "ecological balance" option - this is not a true foreign species, and poses little threat to indigenous fauna. Predatory animals like this are MUCH less dangerous to "bring back" (as would be mammoths and yes, dinosaurs) - as their impact is much more easily calculable, and their population more easily controllable. The vast majority of ecological damage by people has been due to introduction of truly foreign organisms that have high-reproductive capacities and large tolerances to attempts made to control their growth - organisms such as rodents, rabbits, cane toads, insects, kudzu and other weeds, as well as domestic pets.
I feel that restoring extinct animals whose ecological effects are minimal or easily controlled (as would be in the Tasmanian Tiger) and whose extinction was caused by humans is a laudable goal. In addition, the zoological and evolutionary benefits of cloning extinct animals is a worthy goal in and of itself, even if the only specimens are kept in zoos/labs for study. Finally, I would once again like to point out that JURASSIC PARK IS NOT REAL SCIENCE, and that Hollywood moralizing in ANY movie should always be taken with a grain of salt.
Sincerely,
Kevin Christie
Neuroscience Program
Universtiy of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
crispiewm@hotmail.com
Re:As much as I want to be happy about this... (Score:2, Funny)
Yes, I'm saying that we should bring these poor creatures back from extinction so we can start shooting them again.
Re:The end of extinction (Score:2)
it'd be like asking if you could recreate Michaelangelo's David from only a chip of marble... you could create the physical potential, but it was his experiences and environment that shaped him into the man we remember.
he'd be no better than the celebrity impersonators we have already.
his brain structure is lost forever.
Re:The end of extinction (Score:2)
Hard to say. It would depend a great deal on the techniques that were used to preserve his body. If I remember correctly, formaldehyde damages DNA, so if he was embalmed that way you might run into problems.
Still, it's kind of a moot point. You wouldn't end up getting Lincoln as history remembers him. You'd end up getting someone who looks like him, has his potential, and perhaps even some of the same personality quirks, but it wouldn't be him.
Re:The end of extinction (Score:2)
Re:dodo (Score:2)
It's been suggested. DNA has been extracted from the few dodo body parts that are still known to exist in museums, but the DNA is damaged. You can read more about it here [bbc.co.uk].
Problem cloning the Dodo (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I hope they've learned their lesson.... (Score:2, Funny)
1) Don't feed them after midnight. ;)
2) Don't let them get wet.
3) For Pete's sake, the small cute ones are the reason we're in this mess. Do not be fooled by their disarming mewling sounds!
4) And this is the important one, Don't EVER forget, ancient Asian men in antique shops will always sell you something cheaply, but the cost in the long term is not worth the trouble.
Re:japanese researcher trying mammoth (Score:2)
Re:Recently on Discovery (I think...) (Score:2)
A T-Rex would look for something bigger and slower than you, raptors probably ate mostly carrion. Researchers go and live among wolves and lions all the time, and rarely are harmed. You have more to fear from the truck carrying dinosaur embryos than from cloned dinosaurs.
Re: Reality vrs Fiction (Score:2)
There are plenty of big dangerous animals around, and there have been for centuries - we managed to come top of the food chain using spears and arrows, and good luck to any animal that thinks it can topple us.
Just what are you scared of?
the many wild jungle cats running around in England
Oh yeah see them *every day*. Get a fucking grip on reality! This myths have been going around for *centuries* (litteraly) and are still not true.
There are precious few wildcats in Scotland (and they are no bigger than domestic moggies), there are not large litters of 'wild animals'. England is so small and the is one of the most heavily populated areas *in the World*, you'd bump into them every five minutes!
Do you also believe crop circles are made by aliens?
Imagine if a few of them got loose in the countryside....we would have a serious problem on our hands
Bullshit. What, you think maybe they would take over the world? Are you confusing them with Pinky and Brain?
They *might* manage to kill a handful of people, but as of course they'd have eletronic tags, so spotting them really quickly by tracking them remotely and then shooting them would be a non-issue.
Kook.
Re: Reality vrs Fiction (Score:2)
I spend 20 years living in the British countryside. The only fucking cats where domestic moggies.
YOUR A *NUTTER*.
We are not the most powerful of creatures to exist.
Yes we are. That's why we are the dominant species as the top of the food chain.
That's why there are so many exitinct species in the first place.
We are THE most dangerous species every to exist. To date, we are the only one capable of mass destruction.
Besides, you must be daft to think that England is nothing but populated spaces.
As I said *ENGLAND IS ONE OF THE MOST HEAVILY POPULATED AREAS IN THE WORLD*.
It's impossible to get any distance away from humans in England (though this is not true of Scotland which is lightly populated and has less people in it than live in London), England isn't very big. It's *tiny*. For example, the US has *states* twice the size of England.
Not a *SINGLE* SOLITARY reputable source (like the WWF, RSPCA, CPL, etc.) belives there are large wild cats in Britian.
The ONLY wildcats are in Scotland, and, as I said, are the size of a domestic moggie, terrfied of poeople and are an endangered species.
Only tiny minded little Englanders who haven't been to see the rest of the world can see *absurd* the idea is - wild cat encounters happen regularly the US and it's much bigger.
Yet no clear photograhs of such animals exist - only fuzzy pictures that could be domesic moggies or simple stuffed animals. Better photographic evidence exists of Bigfoot or Nessie!
You see, in order for a human to be dangerous, we need to use a tool. If we haven't a tool, then we really aren't all that dangerous.
Ah yes but we *do* have tools. LOTS of them and they make us *much* better at killing that all other animals.
And if we didn't? Well we will *make* them. THAT'S HOW WE GOT THE TOP OF THE FOOD CHAIN!
Re:What you are really forgetting.... (Score:2)
From the inside, perhaps.
Re:Polymerase Chain Reaction Def. (Score:2)
Too bad he wasn't put in Jail as a felon before its discovery. The Nobel prize could have went to someone more law-abiding. We really need tougher drug laws to get these kinds of criminals off the street.
Re:Slashdotted already?! (Score:2)
err wait.. wrong thread.
The reason was not carelessness... (Score:2)
Reasonable objections (Score:2)
If only it were true that the same money available for things like cloning research could be made available to things like habitat preservation instead. But the interests that come up with the money are different enough that I don't think money could be transferred from one to the other.