This item gives us another window
on the developing discipline of de-extinction.
We all think that it is going to work and even if the road is vastly longer, what we are learning is certain to allow some form of recovery to take place.
I consider it completely reasonable to restore all extinct island biomes as a matter of future consideration not because of any good compelling reason that directly benefits ourselves, but because we really can and it would please us.
In practice, restoring the full
Ice Age biome in a continental setting is likely stupid. Far better to pick ideal island refugia and repopulate that.
In any event we will soon be
transitioning to a civilization in which the local biome will be actively
tended and maintenance of rare populations an ongoing avocation never to be let
up. In that situation certain dangerous
carnivores can be managed and tended although it still comes down to a lion not
attacking a lamb and whatever technology makes that possible.
Scientists produce cloned embryos
of extinct frog
The genome of an extinct Australian frog has been revived and
reactivated by a team of scientists using sophisticated cloning technology to
implant a "dead" cell nucleus into a fresh egg from another frog
species.
The bizarre gastric-brooding frog, Rheobatrachus silus -- which uniquely swallowed its eggs, brooded its young in its stomach and gave birth through its mouth -- became extinct in 1983.
But the Lazarus Project team has been able to recover cell nuclei from tissues collected in the 1970s and kept for 40 years in a conventional deep freezer. The "de-extinction" project aims to bring the frog back to life.
In repeated experiments over five years, the researchers used a laboratory technique known as somatic cell nuclear transfer. They took fresh donor eggs from the distantly related Great Barred Frog, Mixophyes fasciolatus, inactivated the egg nuclei and replaced them with dead nuclei from the extinct frog. Some of the eggs spontaneously began to divide and grow to early embryo stage -- a tiny ball of many living cells.
Although none of the embryos survived beyond a few days, genetic tests confirmed that the dividing cells contain the genetic material from the extinct frog.
The results are yet to be published.
"We are watching Lazarus arise from the dead, step by exciting step," says the leader of the Lazarus Project team, Professor Mike Archer, of the
"We're increasingly confident that the hurdles ahead are technological and not biological and that we will succeed. Importantly, we've demonstrated already the great promise this technology has as a conservation tool when hundreds of the world's amphibian species are in catastrophic decline."
The technical work was led by Dr Andrew French and Dr Jitong Guo, formerly of
UNSW's Professor Archer spoke publicly for the first time today about the Lazarus Project and also about his ongoing interest in cloning the extinct Australian thylacine, or Tasmanian tiger, at the TEDx DeExtinction event in Washington DC, hosted by Revive and Restore and the National Geographic Society.
Researchers from around the world are gathered there to discuss progress and plans to 'de-extinct' other extinct animals and plants. Possible candidate species include the woolly mammoth, dodo, Cuban red macaw and
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