OF Course!!
It took centuries and the assistance
of our rats, cats and dogs to destroy unique island ecosystems. Because we can define largely what came
before because we collected samples we can progressively restore. What is far more important, we do have
centuries to make it all good.
The same holds true for the Pleistocene
biome of mammoths and mastodons in particular.
This one will occur far sooner. The
process is well begun.
I think that we want to do it in order to enjoy those biomes.
Once we have a few mastodons roaming around a refugia and a protected passenger pigeon roost, there will be no stopping us.
Just the way that Ducks Unlimited
serves to support waterfowl should well inform us.
Should We Revive
Extinct Species?
Like many others, I’m a fan
of TED Talks and a Feb 2013 talk by Stuart Brand titled “The dawn of
de-extinction. Are you ready?” has caught much of the world off guard.
For those of you who aren’t
familiar with this topic, biotech is currently accelerating four times faster
than digital technology, and the revival of extinct species is not only
becoming possible, but is imminent. Stewart Brand plans to bring many extinct
species back
and restore them to the wild with his Revive and Restore Foundation.
Brand is well aware of the
moral and ethical controversies surrounding this topic – the can-we-should-we
debate – but the issues go far beyond the ethics of de-extinction. What he is
proposing is an “unleashing” of human reengineered species that only closely
approximate those who have become extinct.
So how long will it be before
we see a revived version of the passenger pigeon (extinct in 1914), the
Tasmanian tiger (extinct in 1936), and the woolly mammoth (extinct over 3,000
years ago) roaming the earth again?
It will probably come as a
surprise to most to learn that the first revival of an extinct species has
already occurred. It happened in 2003 when scientists cloned a bucardo, an Iberian wild goat, that had gone extinct three years earlier, by inserting its DNA (which they got from frozen bucardo skin) into the eggs of an existing goat. The cloned bucardo was born, but then died just ten minutes later.
To put this into perspective,
the Wright Brother’s first flight only lasted 12 seconds.
Perhaps the most
controversial comment made by Brand during his talk was, “the results won’t be
perfect but nature isn’t perfect, either.”
So we will only be creating
close proximities to existing species, effectively new forms of life. Here are
a few thoughts on what comes next.
Stuart Brand – “The dawn of de-extinction. Are you
ready?”
Should cloning be used for de-extinction?
In its earliest form,
de-extinction will involve cloning DNA, which means it will raise a number of
ethical questions, like “Should we be playing God?”
According to Brand’s Revive
and Restore Foundation, there are four primary reasons for reviving extinct
species:
- To preserve
biodiversity and genetic diversity.
- To undo harm that humans have caused in
the past.
- To restore
diminished ecosystems.
- To advance the
science of preventing extinctions.
To be sure, humans have
played a role in the extinction of many species, but not all of them. With
some, humans had very little to do with their disappearance.
So should we only focus on
species where human played a role in their extinction? The unanswered questions
go far beyond that.
As an example, if California condors go
extinct, it’s unclear if they could ever be brought back fully, because young
condors rely on their parents for training.
Will a revived species learn
to adapt to its new environment? Will they be able to reproduce in sufficient
number to ever be fully viable? Will the genetic differences be too great for
them to survive, or will those differences make them ultra-adaptable where they
will thrive to the point of becoming a pest to their surroundings.
Three Possible Techniques
Around the same time as the attempted revival of the bucardo in 2003, Robert Lanza, Chief Scientific Officer at Advanced Cell Technology, took tissue from a Javan banteng (not yet extinct), and inserted it into an egg cell of a closely related cow. The cow gave birth to the exotic banteng, which is still alive and thriving.
The cloned Javan banteng
Currently there are three
semi-successful techniques being experimented with for de-extinction.
1.) Selective back-breeding of existing descendants to recreate a primordial ancestor is
being used for the revival of the European Aurochs, among others.
2.) Cloning with cells from cryopreserved tissue of a recently extinct animal can
generate viable eggs. If the eggs are implanted in a closely related surrogate
mother, some pregnancies produce living offspring of the extinct species.
3.) Allele replacement for precision crossbreeding of a living species with an extinct
species is a new genome-editing technique developed by Harvard geneticist,
George Church. If the technique proves successful (such as with the passenger
pigeon), it might be applied to the many other extinct species that have left
their “ancient DNA” in museum specimens and fossils that are thousands of years
old.
Over the coming years many
new techniques will undoubtedly come to life making it one of the hottest new
areas of science.
Reviving Extinct Humans
Resurrecting lost plants and
animals are one thing, but when it comes to tampering with humans the stakes
get much higher.
Here are a few examples of of the ethical dilemas we will be facing:
- Could a young
woman introduce the DNA of her own grandmother to her own eggs and essentially
give birth to a baby ancestor?
- If women could
purchase the DNA of famous people, world leaders of the past, or top
scientists, how many would be willing to pay for genetic material from the
likes of Abraham Lincoln, JFK, Paul McCartney, Richard Branson, or Steve
Jobs?
- By combining
human and animal DNA, is it possible to create super-human DNA?
Are there moral and ethical
boundaries that we should not cross? How will we know when we’ve gone too far?
Driven by ROI
Very often what starts as a
cause, to right the wrongs of the world, will get hijacked by businesses
wanting to profit for the new technology. Moral and ethical edges of science
are often vastly different than the lines businesses are willing to cross.
Genetic research like this is
very expensive, and this recent awareness campaign will undoubtedly draw in
millions.
However, the same people
funding today’s research are often the same people wanting to recoup their
investments, and the lens through which they are viewing the work is vastly different
than the lens of scientists doing the research.
Certainly the moral divide,
created by the chasm between knowledge-seekers and profit-seekers, varies on a
case-by-case basis. It can range from non-existent to something very wide. But
without good systems for governing research and outcomes, it may be wise to
focus on the lack the checks and balances needed to prevent large-scale
disasters.
Final thoughts
The 1993 movie Jurassic Park did a great job of sensitizing the
world to the idea that de-extinction may indeed be possible. As a result, many
scientists decided to make it their mission in life.
While we will see some early
successes over the next ten years, we will also see many setbacks. As Brand
puts it, “De-extinction is not a ‘quick fix’ science. Most species revival
projects will take many decades.”
At the same time, the sum
total of all human knowledge is massively dwarfed by what we don’t know, and
very often our attempts to control the world around us goes very wrong.
A good example of this was
given by Allan Savory, an ecosystem scientist working in Africa when he
recommended the slaughter of 40,000 elephants to help prevent desertification,
only later to realize that elephant grazing itself was highly beneficial to
thwart the encroachment of the desert.\
Brand ended his talk with,
“Humans made a huge hole in nature, and we have a moral obligation to repair
the damage.”
Will the world be a better
place if we bring some of our extinct animals back? Are the close proximities
of animals that Brand describes close enough, or is this a dangerous area to be
playing in? I’d love to hear your thoughts?
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