A Doe, a Deer, a Deer, a Deer... 78
Orne writes "Texas A&M University has announced it has successfully cloned its 5th species, the North American White-Tailed deer (see press release). Though the white-tailed deer is a common species, they hope they can use the knowledge to help repopulate endangered species of deer, like the Key West deer of Florida."
As if there was any doubt (Score:5, Funny)
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:1)
Around here in northern Iowa, they are thicker than cattle. When my parents were young, they never saw deer (there weren't that many of them), but most farmers had cattle. My kids almost never see cattle, but deer don't even excite them - they're too common. Even worse, we're starting to see more "real" predators migrate into the area - bears, lynx, and mountain lions.
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:3, Interesting)
I've heard of the occasional bear and a cougar or two, but those are so rare. I would love to see the population rise. Yeah, we may loose a few poodles in the mix, but that's worth it to me!
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:3, Insightful)
Having said that, deer are more of a threat to people than any bears or cougars would hope to be. I just read that deer/car collisions cause more than $1 billion in damage per year, hurt thousands of people, and kill more than 200 per year. They're as dangerous as the Iraqi army.
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:3, Funny)
I say we start breeding and training bears and cougars to fight against this menace to American society.
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:2)
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:1)
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:1)
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:2)
Don't bet the farm on it my friend. Here in WV, we have, because of the hills, a mixture of urban and wild country thats about as homogenized as you can imagine. And the border blend is often less than 50 feet wide!
The game biolgists all claim we have no mountain lions, aka puma, panther, and several other local names for them.
But I've had the pleasure (well so far its been pleasurable because it hasn't been life threatening,
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:1)
That's a thick deer. WHat are they eating, McDonald's?
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:3, Interesting)
The deer and populations of North America are not very uniform. There are states in the east that are nearly over-run with deer, and have crazy hunts to get rid of them. But in the west the populations aren't as great as they once were. In Oregon, where I live, it's not uncommon to go a couple years without seeing a legal animal. Only seeing imature deer, or no deer at all. For that reason, I have stopped hunting deer. Just because I can get a tag to hunt these animals, doesn't mean I should.
As they also
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:1)
The whitetail deer is an amazingly adaptable animal - they are designed for the way that we grow crops and are thriving out here (to the point where they are a danger to the public).
There are places down by the creeks that you can drive by at twilight and see 30 - 60 deer just standing around.
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:1)
That is how it used to be out here. The coastal range was full of big game. But the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife had "hunter's choice" for way too many years. This ended this year I believe, so I hope the populations will comp back.
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:1)
Re:As if there was any doubt (Score:3, Funny)
You must have missed the part that said it was Texas A&M who created the cloned deer. Here in Texas, Aggie jokes are a beloved source of humor. Here are a couple (from here [halife.com]) that are apropos:
Cheaper Way (Score:5, Funny)
Let them have sex.
(When Texas A&M announced they'd cloned a cat, they said "The last thing we need is a new reproduction strategy for cats.")
Non-Invasive? (Score:2)
Near-extinct species... (Score:2, Interesting)
Why don't they put all the money they spend into something that has a future(pun semi-intended): Time travel!
Re:Near-extinct species... (Score:4, Informative)
Also, there has already been work done on using clones to save endangered species (BBC story [bbc.co.uk]).
There is also a project in Australia to clone an extinct species, the Tasmanian tiger (BBC story [bbc.co.uk]).
There are many reasons for using cloning to save endangered species, rather than just having them mate. These include: some species are not mating fast enough to keep up, some species don't mate well in captivity, and the desire to increase genetic diversity (by cloning from a captive animal that won't breed).
The ethics of all of this may be debatable, but like it or not, the technology is going to make this a real possibility.
Re:Near-extinct species... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Near-extinct species... (Score:5, Informative)
You are correct that this will be a problem for the already extinct species, the Tasmanian tiger, if the suceed in cloning it.
However, this is not what they are doing to save the endangered species. The idea is to clone an individual that won't breed, and then introduce the clone into the captive breeding population. This adds diversity to the gene pool, by bringing in the genes from the non-breeder. Read the original link I posted for more info on this. Of course, this strategy assumes that there wasn't some genetic reason the original animal wouldn't breed in the first place. Perhaps he was shy? Or spent too much time reading slashdot? It seems to me that its likely he was just infertile. This is the biggest weakness of the strategy, in my opinion.
Age of Cloned Animals (Score:2, Insightful)
Transgenic deer (Score:2, Funny)
WTF? (Score:1)
I did not know about those deer. Interesting.
Re:WTF? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:WTF? (Score:1)
Re:WTF? (Score:3, Informative)
(No, I'm not joking. Nobody knows why the crocs have congregated there, but it seems to work for them. Works for the humans, too: alligators don't tend to bother people if they're not bothered first. Crocodiles are considerably more aggressive, so having them stay in a place wher
Re:WTF? (Score:1)
Re:WTF? (Score:2, Informative)
For cold-blooded creatures, their activity is proportional to the ambient temperature of their surroundings; warmer water would allow more reproductive ac
Re:WTF? (Score:2, Funny)
man. there is a goddess.
Re:WTF? (Score:2)
You'd probably do better to stick with frikken sharks.
Re:WTF? (Score:2)
Interesting that the fact that it is a place where aggressive crocodiles congregate isn't enough, and that the only hazardous areas we respect are those we make ourselves.
Sounds like we need human cloning before humans become endangered.
Keepp (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe if we started to realize that in nature, species die off. It happens all the time and hasn't been just recently b/c of humans. Yes, we've caused our share of destruction but has it ever been analyzed against prior species domination?
I'm sure the sabre-toothed tiger never sat back and thought "Shit, i'm killing off these wooly mammoths like crazy! I better think of a way to encourage repopulation before they're extinct!". It just thought "Hey look! It's my next meal to ensure my survival".
Re:Keepp (Score:3, Insightful)
Flawed analogy; animals hunt because they're hungry. Humans hunt for ENTERTAINMENT (mostly.) Name ONE sabre toothed tiger (or for that matter, any animal) that has deer heads mounted on their dwelling walls, and brags to others of their species of
Re:Keepp (Score:3, Informative)
Name ONE sabre toothed tiger (or for that matter, any animal) that has deer heads mounted on their dwelling walls, and brags to others of their species of their "magnificant" kills...
I guess you've never seen what coyotes do to sheep. They go in, slaughter five or ten, eat part of one. Come back tomorrow night, do the same.
Know about the "Butcher Bird"? Catches small rodents, and insects. Impales them on barbed wire, or sharp sticks. Leaves them there.
I guess you get your nature education from wa
Re:Keepp (Score:2)
Re:Keepp (Score:3, Insightful)
Massive overhunting is another, look at how we're depleting world fish stocks. I don't think sport wishing is what's causing this.
The other major factor is of course pollution, and destruction of habitat. Ol' Sabre may have hunted down some mammoths with tooth and nail, he didn't destroy where they lived with piles of toxic shit and clearcutting.
Re:Keepp (Score:1)
Re:Keepp (Score:2)
If anything, it's typical and not classic but that' besides the point.
"have the capacity to extrapolate what would happen if we did that"
And what would happen? Sure we can come up with a bunch of nice statistical models but nature is an animal in itself and will constantly adapt and that's something we can't fully model. We can again give estimates based on our observations but as I'm sure you're well aware of, observing itself messes up the system you're trying to obs
Re:Keepp (Score:1)
Funny you mention the sabre-tooth tiger. What's it doing nowdays? oh yeah
Re:Keepp (Score:2)
Hm... yes, I think it has.
Here's [rochester.edu] a short item on mass extinction vs. background extinction rates. This guy talks about the background rate of extinction of entire marine families; other articles I ran across talked about background extinction rates of individual speci
Seeka Deer ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Seeka Deer ? (Score:1)
Re:Seeka Deer = Sika Deer = (Cervus nippon) ? (Score:2)
I wonder if they are the same as the Sika Deer (Cervus nippon) that we have here in Maryland on Assateague Island [assateague.com] ? The place is lousy with them
Re:Seeka Deer = Sika Deer = (Cervus nippon) ? (Score:1)
I'm not holding my breath until they clone Santa! (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:I'm not holding my breath until they clone Sant (Score:2)
Key Deer, not Key West (Score:5, Informative)
They're very small, standing about two or two and a half feet at the shoulder and weighing maybe 80 pounds.
Re:Key Deer, not Key West (Score:2)
Adaptability at the cellular level? (Score:3, Interesting)
just a thought (Score:2, Interesting)
Cloning panda bears, tigers, or condors might give a more favorable biodiversity/dollars-spent-on-cloning ratio.
Oh Great!!! (Score:1)
Re:Oh Great!!! (Score:1)
doodoo (Score:1)
hunters rejoice! (Score:2)
Re:hunters rejoice! (Score:1)
Good looking and good eatin' too!
Re:hunters rejoice! (Score:2)
Doe, a Deer, a Deer, a Beer... (Score:3, Funny)
Me, the guy who drinks the beer,
Fa, a long way to get beer,
So, I drink a lot of beer,
La, I can't drive after beer,
Te, no thanks, I'm drinking beer
Happy holiday of choice everyone... Just be sure it involves some (free) beer
Re:Doe, a Deer, a Deer, a Beer... (Score:3, Funny)
Do, a beer, a real good beer,
Re, the guy that buys the beer...
Mi, the girl he buys the beer for,
Fa... the distance to the bar
So, I think I'll have a beer...
La, la la la la la la...
Ti, no thanks I've got a beer,
and that brings us back to Do!
Hopefully coming to a supermarket near me! (Score:1)
Cloning vs. Conservation ? (Score:1)
This raises the question of the value of conservation to preserve species. Don't get me wrong: I think that conserving land to preserve species is valuable and important. However, if it is possible to recreate a member of a species a
Mary Poppins (Score:2)
Ray, a drop of golden sun
Me, a name I call myself
Far, a long, long way to run...
A good song, for the musically illiterate.
Re:Mary Poppins (Score:1)
Are you being ironic or just plain stupid?
Re:Mary Poppins (Score:2)
No New Texans! (Score:1)