Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations

What Should and Shouldn’t Get Cloned?

farret
(Image: Getty Images)

We’re always full of questions here, but this week we’re looking into a recent breakthrough that inspires some big thoughts. How close are we to a real life Jurassic Park? Can scientists even clone an extinct species? What should and shouldn’t get cloned?

Films like Jurassic Park have certainly lead to many curious conversations on if such a thing is possible and the ethics behind these decisions. Let’s get the easy question out of the way. How close are we to a real life Jurassic Park right now? Pretty far off. Cloning of extinct species hasn’t gone very well, because of the need for living DNA to work from.  However, on a related note, recently a team of biologists made some big headlines by cloning a black footed ferret, a critically endangered species. These ferrets are endangered because of human disruption of their natural ecosystem. As growing amounts of farmers continued to kill off more and more prairie dogs they drastically altered the natural balance of this ecosystem, passing that ecological stress onto other species, black footed ferrets in this case.

Cloning animals is not a new thing, the first cloning researchbegan in 1885 and the earliest successful cloning experiment using frogs happened in 1952. Since then scientists have cloned fish, flies, monkeys, sheep, and even  water buffalo - among many other critters. Now, a ferret named Elizabeth Ann, has become the latest animal to join the cloned-animals club. Her DNA was extracted from a preserved deceased ferret from 1988 named Willa. Willa’s DNA information was put in a living domesticated ferret’s uterus and after cellular reproduction did its biological thing, Elizabeth Ann made her cloned debut.

This is an incredible breakthrough and provides a potential tool in helping humans address the planet’s endangered species populations. It provides another thing too though, some huge questions.

Much like Ian Malcolm from Jurassic Park, the ethical questions here are pretty important. Just because we can clone endangered species, or perhaps extinct species, should we? The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) is a group that thinks deeply about  these kinds of concerns and several years ago issued guidelines for de-extinction research.

This cloned ferret is not the first time big issues have been raised. All the way back in 2014 we took a look at a similar conversation happening regarding  bringing back extinct animals. This topic is likely going to be around for a while. We’re excited to stem those conversations and hope it inspires you to ponder these thoughts with interested folks in your world too! So, who decides which species are worth cloning? What are the ripple effects of this process? Friendly reminder, this is why it’s so important to  QUESTION YOUR WORLD!!!