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MrBredli
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Turtle cloning plan launched
July 12, 2007 04:41pm
Article from: Reuters
MALAYSIA is launching a $US9 million ($10.45 million) project to clone some of its threatened leatherback turtles to save them from extinction.
Malaysian agricultural and veterinary experts will join scientists in domestic and foreign universities on the five-year project, the New Straits Times reported today.
Cloning animals involves taking the nuclei of cells from adults and fusing them into other egg cells that are implanted into a surrogate mother.
Junaidi Che Ayub, chief of Malaysia's fisheries department, said the cloning procedure would first be carried out on green turtles, which are abundant in Malaysia's northeastern state of Terengganu, where the leatherbacks nest.
“Once we have perfected the technique, we will apply it to leatherback turtles as they are a more complicated species in the turtle family,” the paper quoted Junaidi as saying.
Rantau Abang in Terengganu used to be the nesting home of one of the seven largest leatherback populations in the world but its population has declined by more than 99 per cent since the 1960s, global conservation group WWF says on its Malaysia website.
Leatherbacks, known to scientists as Dermochelys coriacea, get their name from their leathery carapace, and have distinctive long front flippers, the site said.
They face threats such as the loss of nesting and feeding places, excessive egg-collection, fatal entangling in fishing nets, pollution and coastal development, it added.
One of the most famous cloned animals, Dolly the sheep, was born in 1996. She was later euthanised at the age of 8 because of a degenerative lung condition.
From: http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22062425-23109,00.html
July 12, 2007 04:41pm
Article from: Reuters
MALAYSIA is launching a $US9 million ($10.45 million) project to clone some of its threatened leatherback turtles to save them from extinction.
Malaysian agricultural and veterinary experts will join scientists in domestic and foreign universities on the five-year project, the New Straits Times reported today.
Cloning animals involves taking the nuclei of cells from adults and fusing them into other egg cells that are implanted into a surrogate mother.
Junaidi Che Ayub, chief of Malaysia's fisheries department, said the cloning procedure would first be carried out on green turtles, which are abundant in Malaysia's northeastern state of Terengganu, where the leatherbacks nest.
“Once we have perfected the technique, we will apply it to leatherback turtles as they are a more complicated species in the turtle family,” the paper quoted Junaidi as saying.
Rantau Abang in Terengganu used to be the nesting home of one of the seven largest leatherback populations in the world but its population has declined by more than 99 per cent since the 1960s, global conservation group WWF says on its Malaysia website.
Leatherbacks, known to scientists as Dermochelys coriacea, get their name from their leathery carapace, and have distinctive long front flippers, the site said.
They face threats such as the loss of nesting and feeding places, excessive egg-collection, fatal entangling in fishing nets, pollution and coastal development, it added.
One of the most famous cloned animals, Dolly the sheep, was born in 1996. She was later euthanised at the age of 8 because of a degenerative lung condition.
From: http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22062425-23109,00.html