How hard would it be to clone recently extinct animals

I swear I have heard a story in france I think where a couple plans to get their dog cloned when it dies. We know its possible to clone it is just hard to do. I am not talking about Dinos but what about recently extinct species that we even have frozen specimens of. From reading wikipedia it seems their are a few species of birds scientists froze because they knew the extinction was inevitable

Thylacine cloning project does not appear to be going well.

The problem as I see it is where/how are the resurrected species going to live? If their habitat has been destroyed, are you going to keep them in labs or zoos? All that cloning technology is great, but it doesn’t seem right to re-create animals just to be toys or guinea pigs.

A lot of species of interest aren’t extinct due to habitat loss. Many are gone from over hunting by early man or later human predation.

Actually, the recently extinct Pyrenean Ibex has been cloned, although the offspring died at birth.

In cases where it the complete, intact DNA of a recently extinct species has been preserved by freezing or other method, it is likely that it might be possible to clone it within the near future (say, the next decade). However, in cases where the DNA has been degraded (which will be the case when the specimen is preserved by drying, or in alcohol or formalin, or when it has been frozen for a long period) cloning becomes much more problematical. In the latter case, genetic engineering as well as cloning will be needed.

What’s wrong with zoos?

I hate people like you. This does not come remotely close to providing an answer to his question.

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Colibri
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