Prof Andrew Pask is part of a team of scientists who want to bring the Australian predator back to life using genetic engineering. – dpa/Tigrr Lab, University of Melbourne
Today, the available technology is believed to offer a chance at its de-extinction, although it is a highly laborious undertaking. However, it is not possible to create life from a dead specimen. “We still have to start with something living,” says Pask, which is why de-extinction projects search for the closest living relative of the vanished animal.
The young would then be raised in the laboratory, after which the predator – if all goes well – will be released back into its natural habitat in Tasmania. “I still don’t believe we are even close to having the technology to genuinely re-create an extinct animal,” Professor Jeremy Austin of the Australian Center for Ancient DNA toldDe-extinction is a “fairytale science,” he said, dismissing the project as a bid for publicity by the researchers involved.
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