Spokane89 t1_jebbudp wrote
Two reasons: 1) cloning is more or less illegal 2) they need good DNA samples to try and clone from and folks wiping species from existence weren't really in the habit of preserving remains
aspacelot t1_jebe6bz wrote
> they need good DNA samples to try and clone from and folks wiping species from existence weren’t really in the habit of preserving remains
Couldn’t they just fill in the missing gaps in DNA with that of similar specimens? Frogs capable of asexually reproducing, for example?
canuckcowgirl t1_jebigzp wrote
Didn't you see the movie? What could go wrong?
Spokane89 t1_jebeqz2 wrote
I'm not super well versed in biology or cloning to confidently answer this question
MtPollux t1_jebg8ob wrote
What could possibly go wrong?
[deleted] t1_jebh130 wrote
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blindspot189 t1_jebei7l wrote
No laws against cloning animals in Germany, Great Britain, France, Austria, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Greece and The United States
Spokane89 t1_jebfjsa wrote
It's down to states rights currently in the USA, and funding is hard to get generally afaik
bikinibikes t1_jebe6vo wrote
On that second point, could a pelt be used? Or does the process of preserving a pelt render the DNA unusable?
Edit: clarified the question
Spokane89 t1_jeben20 wrote
A lot of pelts are treated with things like arsenic or mercury which really fucks up DNA. They have been able to get samples off pelts, they did with tasmanian devils a few years back, but I'm not sure how viable that in regards to cloning.
bikinibikes t1_jebjp5q wrote
Ah that's what I thought. Thanks!
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