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Science

Plan To Build a Genetic Noah's Ark Includes a Staggering 66,000 Species (gizmodo.com) 78

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: An international consortium involving over 50 institutions has announced an ambitious project to assemble high-quality genome sequences of all 66,000 vertebrate species on Earth, including all mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish. With an estimated total cost of $600 million dollars, it's a project of biblical proportions. It's called the Vertebrate Genomes Project (VGP), and it's being organized by a consortium called Genome 10K, or G10K. As its name implies, this group had initially planned to sequence the genomes of at least 10,000 vertebrate species, but now, owing to tremendous advances and cost reductions in gene sequencing technologies, G10K has decided to up the ante, aiming to sequence both a male and female individual from each of the approximately 66,000 vertebrate species on Earth. Cofounders of the project announced the new goal yesterday at a press briefing held during the opening session of the 2018 Genome 10K conference, currently being held at Rockefeller University in New York City. The project will involve over 150 experts from 50 institutions in 12 countries.
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Plan To Build a Genetic Noah's Ark Includes a Staggering 66,000 Species

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    I think this is an excellent idea and my first reaction was, "Only 66000 species?" But because of the limited scope of the project that makes sense. However, in order for a project like this to really be useful in a worst-case scenario, all these vertebrates will need some company. Hopefully the other arc-style projects can supply that.

    • by pollarda ( 632730 ) on Friday September 14, 2018 @12:25AM (#57311658)
      I have to wonder if they are also going to sequence the mitochondrial DNA. Mitochondrial DNA is often forgotten in these discussions but if you ever want to really clone something, is vitally important.
    • On a reasonable budget they could do that many for about 200m, so x3 is about a normal rate for colleges.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Nope, not a public service in the least. Quite simply a cross referential database of genetic sequences to spot the differences, in core characteristics, the whys and wherefores and then claim they originated the sequence and steal it from the public domain.

      It seems like the cheeky fuckers are getting everyone to donate time and effort and then they will steal the outcomes. By cross referencing genetic sequences and known outcomes for each species, you can effectively tag the combination to generate specif

    • By the time they reach 62,000, they'll realize that the other 4000 have gone extinct.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    but there's no female in his species. He's like a Moclan, only without the charm.

  • by sheramil ( 921315 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:57PM (#57311578)

    Maybe they were thinking of the early Hollywood biblical film epics. They cost a lot of money, at the time.

    Anyway, to get back to the cynicism, what's the bet this company decides they own those genetic sequences once they've sorted them out?

    • by WolfgangVL ( 3494585 ) on Friday September 14, 2018 @12:43AM (#57311686)

      I thought the very same thing, so I actually read the article.

      From TFA

      "The new sequences will be stored and made publically available at the Genome Ark database, a digital open-access library of genomes. Corporate sponsors DNAnexus and Amazon Web “have been instrumental in getting this project off the ground,” said Phillippy."

      I'm certain there will be some catch on account of "corporate sponsors", but at face value, this actually looks pretty benevolent. I'm guessing the corporate dogs get some kind of "Right of patent" or the like on the inevitable research breakthroughs and discoveries that come of this.

      Article also says it takes a week to sequence a single one, so we're talking 11,088,000 man hours (before setbacks, mistakes and equipment failures) with current technology, and it's worth pointing out that this is running in tandem with the Human Connectome Project, and possibly replicating the efforts of the Earth Biogenome Project.

      While I'm all for a project like this, putting the complete genome of every vertebrate species on the planet into an open source project just for the lolz, this sounds way to good to be true.

      Also, does putting the number 66k out there means we're finally past the whole "new species are being discovered everyday." phase of history?

    • Anyway, to get back to the cynicism, what's the bet this company decides they own those genetic sequences once they've sorted them out?

      They aren't hosting any themselves at this point and are just acting as an index (which has a download link which is broken on their site) of universities who signed on. So essentially, if they have anything already they decided not to share outside of that network.

    • by realxmp ( 518717 )
      Speaking as someone who is sitting about 20 metres away from one of the major groups in this project, I invite you to look up the Sanger Institute and read our history. Remember the Human Genome Project? The race between a commercial effort to sequence and patent the Human genome and the academic effort to release it publicly? We were the ones doing the public release, and that data promised to be far more valuable to pharma than these animal genomes. So no I would not take that bet. Besides we have already
  • That way you could create a better model.

    I guess once you've sequenced them all, you could beam the info to space, you know, just in case...

    • They're sequencing vertebrate species - add that word and the first Google results say there's only 40,000 instead of the 8.7 million total estimate.

  • That's actually peanuts, not considering the complexity but seems a right step in a good direction.
  • Supernatural climate change and divine wisdom leads to antediluvian inbreeding depression. God damn it!

  • I hope that when they sequence all these critters they take the time for quality documentation! Would be very annoying for future generations/aliens if they manage to create the first example, only to find out they don't have any food!
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • For the same reason Pluto is named Pluto and Neptune is named Neptune? By the time Pluto got its name, no one believed in the Greek gods.
  • I note that whilst the article has plenty about the challenge of sequencing that many DNA sequences at high quality and low cost, there is no mention of the sheer logistical complexity of getting samples from 66,000 different species some of which are presumably very rare.

    No doubt quite a lot can be achieved by contacting a great number of zoos around the world, but it seems to me that there must be a great many species not held in collections. One rarely sees bats in zoos for example and I understand t
  • Considering the number of species, that 66,000 is a drop in the bucket of animal DNA.

    I don't consider that as any kind of definition for "staggering" if you are actually trying to do any kind of ark.

    The Svalbard Global Seed Vault currently has about 968,000 samples, and can hold up to about 4,500,000, and theirs aren't genetic profiles, it's actual packets of seeds.

    As to the VPA, will those "high definition genetic profiles" have enough data to replicate the DNA? Why don't they have tissue samples?

    Yes, sure
    • True, but they're only sequencing *vertebrate* species - and 66,000 is just about all of those known.

      I suppose they figure if we wipe out the smaller faster-living species we'll be too screwed to recover. Or new species will evolve fast enough to fill the niches.

  • The consortium is spearheaded by InGen.
  • Even if they could use the DNA to bring a species back to life...

    One of each sex isn't a large enough population to bring them back from the dead. There isn't enough genetic variation in two members. They need to have samples of a lot more of each species.

    And this is something that I've never heard brought up in science programs that talk about bringing back extinct animals. (I'm not saying nobody has thought about it, I just haven't heard that they have.) All animals have an extensive micro biome in their

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