• Question: is stuff like Jurassic park possible if you got dinosaur DNA and cloned it or something

    Asked by lanej012 to Claire, Joanna, Kapila, Renata, Suzanne on 24 Jun 2013.
    • Photo: Renata Medeiros

      Renata Medeiros answered on 24 Jun 2013:


      In theory it is!! I answered a similar question about Dodos but I also mentioned dinosaurs, so I’ll copy it here again:
      This is a very interesting question and a complicated one. In theory it should be possible and scientists are actually trying to do it at this very moment! The problem is that cloning animals isn’t all that easy: Dolly the sheep, the first cloned animal to be born, was the only one to survive out of almost 300 cloned cells. I am not sure about the cost but it certainly isn’t cheap! So it might take a while before we see a dodo again but I am convinced that it will happen at some point.
      The issue is: where are we going to put all the animals we bring back to life? In most cases their environment has changed and suddenly putting an extinct species back into it could have very bad consequences to other species. To avoid that, not very long ago, some scientists from Japan already thought of the idea of creating a Jurassic Park for all extinct species, just like in the movie (though I don’t think dinosaurs will be a possibility as finding good dinosaur DNA is almost impossible).
      We could also use cloning as a way of stopping species from being extinct. Although we could learn a lot from bringing extinct species back to life, in my opinion, we should worry more about saving those that we still haven’t destroyed before thinking of amusing ourselves in Jurassic Parks!

    • Photo: Joanna Bryson

      Joanna Bryson answered on 24 Jun 2013:


      I agree with Renata, I just want to add one thing — I think someone in Russia may be trying to do this with a mammoth. But it’s very, very hard even with existing animals, like Renata said. But if you want to see gory pictures of a mammoth corpse, here they are: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2013/06/130601-woolly-mammoth-blood-russia-science-extinct-species-deextinction/

    • Photo: Claire El Mouden

      Claire El Mouden answered on 25 Jun 2013:


      Hi,

      I answered the question about dodos as well…you’ll see from how I started my answer that you are bang on!

      “Have you seen the film jurassic park? In theory, in the future that sort of thing might be possible. If the complete genome of the extinct species still exists, and there is a species currently alive that is similar enough so that a female of that species could be made pregnant with the implanted artificial egg, then in theory yes. However, there are lots of challenges. First, getting the complete DNA is not easy….they are trying it for mammoths and dodos. Inserting the DNA into an egg is the next step (you remove the DNA that is there and then replace it with the DNA you want). It’s not clear this step would work, as the egg would be of a different (but related) species e.g. For a mammoth, I guess they would use an elephant’s egg. The next challenge is to get an animal pregnant with that egg….and that will be difficult as the mother will probably try to reject the egg if it does not appear to be healthy. So miscarriage will be a big problem. Assuming the embryo does grow and the mother gives birth, there is a risk that baby will have deformities or will develop problems like cancer, that comes from the DNA not being perfect….so we are a very long way away from doing this….as there are scientific challenges, but more importantly big ethical questions too. Is it right to ‘play god’ like this and bring back extinct animals? Is it right to create a baby animal like this that may be sick? These are not questions scientists alone should answer – the whole of society needs to join in on such conversations….what do you think?”

    • Photo: Suzanne Harvey

      Suzanne Harvey answered on 28 Jun 2013:


      Yesterday an article came out with the entire genome of a horse that lived 700,000 years ago – this is by far the oldest DNA that’s been sequenced, so maybe soon we will have dinosaur DNA 😀

      The cloning technology already exists, so I think this will soon be possible…

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