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the process of cloning is taking the dna and nucleus of a pre made egg and
replacing with another animals dna later on that dna grows to make a
animal although there is a very huge chance of failure such like heart
disease Cloning, as it's most customarily practised at the present, involves
the transfer of nuclei from cells and transferring those cells into eggs where
the nucleus has been removed, and then the nucleus from the animal to be
cloned is put in its place. If it's a mammal, those new embryos then have to
be transferred into recipient females for them to carry on to term.
The origin of animal cloning comes from the 1996 by a scottish scientist he
cloned a sheep named dolly this stated the capabilities that this possible
which meant there is a future in this field which encouraged scientists to
expand in this field.
Animal cloning is also a very risky industry there are lots of factors that can
affect there could be immune system failure etc which leads to the animals
death. There have been more than 20 species that have been attempted to
be cloned, usually 1 in 143 are successful which means the success is very
low. The last successfully cloned animal is a Przewalski horse this is as of the
date of 16 nov 2022. some issues of animal cloning is that the animale is
usually bigger at birth than most a natural offspring for its size and small
the cloning world
immune system it is hard for the animale to live but if the animal encounters
a flu or a illness it means 80% of a failure of the project since the immune
system isn't strong enough.
the title of this “article” is the world of cloning discussing all the different
types of cloning science can help solve some problems in the future but the
cloning shouldnt be used in everyday killed animals but only in extinct
animals if we clone everyday eaten animals that are not extinct those
animals population will increase and can lead to animal overpopulation
What do you think?
sources
Cloning | National Geographic Society. education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/cloning.
www.genome.gov/about-genomics/fact-sheets/Cloning-Fact-Sheet.
“---.” HORMEX,
hormex.com/blogs/plant-growth-101-blog/what-is-plant-cloning-and-how-does-it-work.
Trees.com Staff. “How to Clone Plants (With Pictures).” Trees.com, 10 Oct. 2022,
www.trees.com/gardening-and-landscaping/how-to-clone-plants.