A woman cloned her pet after it died
Chai’s death came unexpectedly — a freak accident of sorts after she swallowed a piece of a wrapper that got lodged in her intestines. WhenRead More »A woman cloned her pet after it died
Chai’s death came unexpectedly — a freak accident of sorts after she swallowed a piece of a wrapper that got lodged in her intestines. WhenRead More »A woman cloned her pet after it died
Social media influencers are at the center of a growing debate over pet cloning, a special science that uses technology to clone animals. NBC’s JacobRead More »The Rising Trend of Influencers Cloning Pets
Kelly Anderson never planned to clone Chai. But when tragedy took her beloved 5-year-old Ragdoll in 2017, a mere two weeks after she learned ofRead More »Pet Cloning Becomes A Reality
The holidays came early for conservation biologists in 2020 when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced on 10 December that scientists had successfully cloned a wild black-footedRead More »Using Genomic Tools for Population Management (aza.org)
On February 17, 2023, ViaGen Pets and Equine, working with the esteemed San Diego Zoo, successfully cloned a second endangered Przewalksi horse. Just like theRead More »Second Endangered Przewalski’s Horse Foal Born as a Result of Cloning
As a species’ numbers dwindle, so does its genetic diversity—the range of inherited characteristics within its population. Generally, the more diverse the gene pool, theRead More »A New Cloned Horse Offers Hope for Endangered Species
Przewalski horses cloned from a stallion that died in 1998 could help reintroduce much needed diversity to the species that was once declared extinct inRead More »Cloned Przewalski Horses are ‘Resurrected Stallions’ That Could Help Species Thrive, Scientists Say
The story behind “Latte Ditto”, a clone of Mary Walker’s infamous barrel horse “Latte”. Read the full story here.
Explore the captivating story of Paris Hilton’s cloned dogs and the remarkable journey of pet cloning. Read the full story here.
Some conservationists are now asking: Is nature’s 3.6 billion-year-old code of life in need of a reboot? Read the full story here.