Science Scientists are planning to bring back Dodo to life, re-introduce them in Mauritius

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India, Dec. 2 -- A group of scientists are trying to bring back the extinct Dodo bird to life and re-introduce them to Mauritius.
Mauritian Wildlife Foundation and US-based biotechnology and genetic engineering company Colossal Biosciences have signed a partnership with regard to the project.

The Foundation said in a statement: "We are thrilled to inform you that Colossal Biosciences , the US, breakthrough genetic engineering and de-extinction company, has signed a partnership agreement with the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation."
Colossal and the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation also plan to collaborate on the restoration of critical ecosystems through invasive species removal, revegetation, and community awareness efforts.
"These habitats will, in the long term, support Dodo populations as well as other native Mauritian species. In addition, the two organizations will be investigating if techniques developed for the dodo can assist with the genetic rescue of the Pink Pigeon (Nesoenas mayeri)," the statement said.
What is a Dodo bird?
The dodo is an extinct flightless bird that was endemic to the island of Mauritius, which is east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean.
The Dodo's closest relative was the also-extinct and flightless Rodrigues solitaire.
The two formed the subfamily Raphinae, a clade of extinct flightless birds that were a part of the family which includes pigeons and doves.
The bird has been extinct since 1681.
Why Dodo needs to be revived?
Ben Lamm, CEO and co-founder of Colossal, told CNN that "restoring the dodo gives us the opportunity to create 'conservation optimism,' that hopefully inspires people around the globe, specifically the youth, in a time when climate change, biodiversity loss and politics can make things seem hopeless."
He added that the techniques pioneered by the dodo project could help restore other avian species.
Published by HT Digital Content Services with permission from India Blooms.

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What could possibly go wrong?
 
I wish them the best of luck. Last year Colossal Biosciences fully sequenced the genome of the Asian elephant, making them the first company to completely sequence a mammalian genome since the Human Genome Project. Their goal is to recreate the genome of the wooly mammoth and have living mammoths by 2028 (They're also trying to bring back the thylacine and dodo but who cares about those).

I think trying to bring back the dodo is dumb, but I'm cool with this company getting more attention.
 
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Of all the extinct animals you choose a bird that is the inbred, fetal alcohol suffering cousin of the bird family?
Clone some cool or cute animals.
Floofy mammoths or badass sabretooth tigers.


But then, you fuckers will fuck it up as always, so it will atleast only affect an island nobody cares about.
I just want to know one thing. Did they taste good?
 
It's not going to be the same animal. It can have the exact same DNA but the behavioral instincts it learned over thousands of years just won't be there. Although now that I think about it, the real life dodo was useless too so maybe the resurrected one will be a good match.
 
watch it die out again
you know it will
extinct species go extinct for a reason

In this case is was a legitimate Opps moment, it was finally killed when Rat's got introduced to the island they had nothing akin to it on the island at the time and the rat's predated the egg's, combine that with Hunting because the feathers where popular accessories and it lead to it becoming extinct.

Their goal is to recreate the genome of the wooly mammoth and have living mammoths by 2028 (They're also trying to bring back the thylacine and dodo but who cares about those).

They have access to some of the Mammoth flesh that get's discovered from time to time, including Bone Marrow IRC they are planning on sequencing the African Elephant and then trying to use that as a base identifying where they differ and going from there, From what I read it's easer than taking a domestic cat and trying to turn it into a Lion because they are more closely related and share a common ancestor far more closely evolutionary speaking than the small felines and larger ones (small ones came first and had a few evolutions between them).
 
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