tv Reversing Extinction Deutsche Welle February 6, 2025 5:15am-6:01am CET
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tional outrage after saying to us, we'll take over the gaza strip and that palestinians living there should be re settled elsewhere. us officials have since tried to walk back ins, declaration including calling relocation of gauze and temporary during reconstruction. and you're up to date, you've been watching due to the new stick with us if you can, the not just another day so much is happening all at once. we take time to understand this is the day i'm in the look. it's current use events, analyzed by experts and critical thinking is this is with the weekdays on dw, the, the,
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it's the biggest mass extinction since the dinosaurs disappeared. every year countless species are lost. but is that permanent? the we're going to have to take him to the past and bring some of these really important species back. it is hope that technology will enable this the right knows, need our help, and i want to help somebody i can help them. and the aim is to give new advice to the genetic material of dead animals. if not, to is financing this, which has a motive. some isn't the money needed to elsewhere. that's how things are progressing rapidly and laboratories around the world. our goal is to have our 1st man with cast by 2028. your lesson does awesome. we're opening up doors box and
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have no idea of what to expect. the this is not found her daughter far too, to northern invite rhinos the last of their kind. this b c's has been almost exterminated to harvest their horns. the 2 females are guarded, round the clock at a fenced in sanctuary, and can you in the wild, only southern white, right? those are left. they are related but have different language and genetics. the, the last northern rhino people died in 2018. so there can be no more off spring when nodding and 5 to die, an entire species will become extinct. nothing more can be done for canot.
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experts in prison are not yet admitting defeat the tax payer funded life nets. institute for zoo and wildlife research leads the international scientific consortium by a rescue. reproductive medicine specialist trauma says the behind has been the head of this project since 2019. which aims to prevent the extinction of the northern wide rhino. but i'm, i'm is, i'm the, was the way you work to save such a large amount on your face with almost unsolvable problems and have to develop completely new approaches for each moya and that's it. and because the cry laboratory for decades, researchers have been storing tissue samples here, including egg and sperm cells, from 300 endangered animal species. it's like a frozen zoom. the cell are preserved in liquid nitrogen in a kind of hibernation,
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stayed at minus 193 degrees and sod as required. they include sperm from for northern wide finals. that guidance is the samples are crucial for too much as a bond, and susanna hurts the eggs, have sick retrieve from far too and magazine. these will then be fertilized in the laboratory. with the preserved sperm of the dead rhino pulse, an embryo develops in nutrients, fluid, and as implanted in a cow of the related southern white for analysis. in the womb of the server gets mother the embryo, develops into and run nice and risk calf and is born after 16 months. as soon as possible, the little one will then be placed with thought to or not seem to be brought up.
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the it is an experiment on wild animals that have a special significance that's nice on is the final service, is a key students be fees, which means that it's at the top of a hierarchy of entire species communities as high says with the scope of the young man, in a circle, hearing an ecosystem by bringing back a keystone species is a very important element in repairing the planet. need to be the intact to become the kids are plants. missions again in 2019 and kenya they both project a game reserve, the vet for repairs, the operations it's a race against time. the calf has to learn the behavior of its last 2 living species, man,
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verse before they die. in the 2 females can no longer bear offspring themselves. you can fall to born in 1989 has just an inflammation in her uterus and her mother knology and who was 11 years older than her has injured hind legs. however, both are still producing healthy eggs for testing. so i know how she looks. i think you did a very good job to keep her home. this is mobile. i left 3 block so vivid, and eliza black and, and check some blood kind of meet the hundreds of kilos of equipment have been flowing in. the experts have gained a lot of experience to similar procedures on su animals. but they do not know how a wild animal will react to the removal of x. the fact, too is under anesthetic. her heart rate and breathing are being monitored. the procedure
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being performed by his plans team is risky for the animal. since the sexual tract of a female rhinoceros is like a labyrinth, an ultrasound prob helps to monitor the operation the the specimens, look healthy. the female rhino was unharmed and recovers quickly. her eggs take a long journey to europe, to a special laboratory in italy. the wide rhinos still have habitats and could survive if they were not hunted.
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according to studies, human influence means that species die out hundreds of times faster than they otherwise would. there have been at least 5 major species extinction events in the history of the earth. about 450000000 years ago, the sea level dropped and the planet became bitterly cold. 85 percent of species died after which many new ones developed. the next event was massive volcanic eruptions, oxygen depletion, and the oceans that killed off almost all life. an asteroid impact triggered the next disaster. a good 60000000 years ago, a media right crushed into the earth, followed by earthquakes. and so now means, the sky darkened and the planet became extremely cold. almost all dinosaurs disappeared in this event. along with many other species,
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the can we bring back dinosaurs like into a rustic park? probably not because their genetic material has decayed over time. but the last mamma died only around 4000 years ago. is there any chance of reviving this species without using preserved selves as with the rhinoceros, is in addition to the deterioration of their living conditions? hunting by humans, also played a role in the extinction of these ancient elephants. the all that exists now are fines in the frozen ice of russia and alaska. the idea of resurrecting them has been discussed for decades. for a long time, however, there was a lack of sufficient genetic material and methods to replicate the he is. this is
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now changing the following ground inside the area has repeatedly revealed well preserved specimens. this has made it possible to reconstruct completely the mammoths genetic materials from tissue bones and blood in dallas in the us. a private company wants to take the next steps. colossal bio sciences has been working on the extinction projects. i eat the revival of extinct species since 2021. more than 60 scientists are involved in this research. the $225000000.00 us dollars of company capital comes from investors, including a company financed by the c. i a colossal bio sciences states on its website that it is committed to restoring the earth to
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a healthier state. they want to revolutionize history. i'd be the 1st company to successfully apply modern genetic engineering to extinct species. the brains behind this project, our scientist, george church, and entrepreneur, band lab. we saw an opportunity to one bring back iconic species that humans had a role in their extinction. and we're kind of undo the sins of the past, we while the back into the eco system and partnerships with like, indigenous people, groups and private landowners, and governments, as a way to help restore egos, systems in on the path to that. we want to build technology that help modern conservation that can be applied today. the colossal flagship project is the mammoths. their closest relatives are asian, no offense whose population is declining because their habitats are frankly, the idea is to open up new areas and colder regions for this b. c's,
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thanks to ma'am of genetic materials. the only reason we're looking at a incidental in this case um, under that framing at least, is because those elephants were exceptionally called resistance. they, they could live for months at minus 40 degrees. and so, so that's a, as a rear resources we want to exploit. genetic material, the asian elephant, is 99.6 percent identical to that of the minus the remaining 0.4 percent will be covered by a new type of technology. certain gene segments are removed from the genetic material of a fertilized accel of an asian elephant kyle, using crisper gene scissors with the artificially recreated dna, the blueprint of which originates from mammoths genes for when we hear. and the
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sick layer of fact can be precisely implanted into the genetic material of the elephant cell via electrical stimulation. the manipulated accel grows into an embryo. it will be planted in the form of a surrogate. i'll send mother the spring will then have the cold resistance of a bully, mammoth, and will probably look like want to magnets. and elephants carried the young for 22 months. it would take a long time to produce these hybrid creatures, and it would take many surrogate mothers. maybe too many we're working for a variety of reasons on developments outside of the elephant spot. it develop, you know, from embryo to it's a newborn, ex vivo and artificial looms. and that sort of thing is best possible. in 2017, a team of american researchers managed to grow premature lambs in a bio bag that type of plastic bag. since then,
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many scientists have been working on developing artificial booms the stab. ready centers throughout the arctic where they will be born right near where they're going to be. so you don't have to though the lower is uh they just, they walk out the door of the lab and there where they belong. and this is where these mammas elephants will graze inside periods for mammoth step, where grazing animals are scarce and forests are now growing. in 2018 george church make russian biologists sergey zima, who has been running a special research station there for decades. an ice age park. he has settled by some musk ox and wild horses over a large area. why?
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the urban boys scrape away the snow to find food. they remove the insulating layer of snow on the ground. cold air reaches the soil and ensures that it remains frozen and does not stop. this means that less stored carbon dioxide is released from the soil into the environment. man that's could therefore help to protect the climate. however, this would require thousands of colossal bio sciences laboratory animals with the mammoths colonies be good for the natural world. at presenting back natural history museum in frankfort, contin boone engage the researches by a diversity i the relationships between animals plans and their habitats displayed . and notice that would be a really wild experiment which had part of see the manifest parasites and has an impact on the vegetation fuel and that keeps their competitive relationships with other species. so as of this, it looks as if we've been threading the colossus into
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a complex network and as effects all the other threats, so we can't predict an advantage. what will happen find, i hope the fall is 2nd less than me plus yet on the return of the quad that is being worked on in south africa, there are also plans to recreate the american passenger pigeon. there are no known plans for the joint. ok. the situation is different for the slight less dodo researchers outcome. also want to bring back the bird that was wiped out by human, introduced rats. this v to some lead of a bringing the things to pieces back to life is obviously something that fascinates people. and it's understandable less we can save and bring back what we have lost. that's known salute, cool investment for the one hub. but in terms of protecting bio diversity, it's a tiny drop in an ocean of problems. what's yan from putting according to studies, up to $58000.00 speeds, these become extinct every year. their genetics are lost and they leave gaps in the
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network of relationships and their habitat. the excuse me, i'll give you some more species. we have some more robust and stable equal systems are. this means that every time we lose the species we, we can this network of life. and this creates uncertainty and i'm interested on and also ecosystem functions that we obtain from nature are becoming increasingly difficult to grasp and produce really go too fast and on support to see on the rescue of the rhinos continues in northern italy near the city of cremona, by a rescue research consortium includes until a leading specialist laboratory for horse breeding. the experts are working on combining the genetic material of highly productive farm animals. but since horses are related to rhinoceroses, much is also similar in their embryonic development.
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this is why all of the northern wide rhino eggs from kenya are brought here to be fertilized. but the researchers are breaking new ground with these wild animals who are missing the guns, but not to discover the very specific requirements that the writing officers embryo has not identified these and long series of test. one months of the summit, exiles don't tolerate fruit to has some glucose to close it. then you have to find that out, cuz they're not on lots of small things, but they have a significant impact. google compared to horses, the number of eggs obtained from the 2 runny nose, a small, and not all of them survive transportation and the procedure before they are fertilized. the embryonic drum cell still have to mature at a constant temperature. embryos are produced here not only from northern wide rhinos, but also from the more common southern species. the researchers want to practice
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the embryo transfer method on these animals. first, the odd spend from deceased rhinoceros bulls are injected into the excels dx. then divide regularly in the incubator until they are sufficiently multi cellular their growth is interrupted after 8 days. the, all embryos are then stored in the cold chamber for later use in kenya.
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in the old project, essential wary embryo use is 1st being tested on the southern wide reino. this is why mother nature comes in of the as well as the surrogate mother. as the bullet has also been selected, his presence stimulates the females and indicates whether one of the partners is ready to conceive. the bowl has been sterilized, as he is not supposed to father any off spring with a surrogate mother is meeting occurs. the researchers only have 6 days to implant the embryo created in the laboratory into the call on september 23rd. to buy a rescue. researchers get ready the
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vet has to get close to the female with the anesthetic gun. this is because the range of the dart, which is fired using air pressure is short. the the a nice 2 ties for nasa risk how is immediately protected from overheating physical ads and holds to have previously tested 13 embryo transfers and runny nose and zulus. and on farms each time and successfully, they have developed all the methods and technical equipment for this b c's themselves. with this needle system, here's a punch, has to be careful not to hit any of the large blood vessels. when inserting the embryos, the rhino survives the procedure well, from now on, it's
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a case of waiting m. c. and kenya, berlin and simona to buy a rescue consortium is working to save. the rhino support is now also coming from dallas. the private consortium colossal is not only working on providing the mamma is also seeking partnerships with other scientists. it has been cooperating with the berlin institute for zoo and wildlife research since 2023 from was on the. it has to be said that companies like colossal work closely with us and provide us with technology is developed for our needs, belong to fuels based me. besides that, in addition to their efforts to bring back the madness of which they are helping us in our contribution efforts to use these highly complex technologies for the northern white rhino looking for that's not lisa plasma, not somebody says that the american company is particularly interested in the
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experience gained in be productive biology, you have to have all of the top expert. you have all the special is. if you have a bunch of technology, then you need a lot of infrastructure. so, you know, we, we raise $225000000.00 to go uh, support this these initiatives. and then some of the technology that we develop, they have an application of human health care. we're monetizing for economic returns. colossal itself is a colossus among high tech companies. the biotech company was valued in 2023 and $1000000000.00 in the german university town of to the, in. the biologist is investigating the effects of the work involved and reviving extinct species as an independent environmental f assessed to is the advisors authorities and universities. should we spend a lot of money on mammals projects?
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this i didn't get to the fact that someone is money, but something is not a bad thing per se. but of course, the question is, who is financing this and what then move to see it though, and might the money not be needed much more urgently elsewhere going into a problem until now, environmental organizations have spent a lot on preserving protected areas. the modern approach of investing large sums and the return of extinct animals might not always edit, the rather conservative approach of preserving living species. this gives us losing always the risk that in the hope that we can simply rebuild everything against the assets that would have to be made to preserve bio diversity. now will decline, knock that we will put enough human and financial resources into it and say, well, once the next thing we'll just rebuild them again to see if you know the progress is any other concern is if you can repair like this, then you won't have to worry about, it's
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a tall he like because you can repair all of the amenities. mistake all that that's, that's nice. i don't think that will be the case because it's simply far too expensive. this and the experience and extreme expense, the commitment in terms of scientific technology hours, it should be the exception the to the ultimate fires. and even now the rescue efforts for the rhinoceros would hardly be feasible without funding from german tax payers. funding for nature conservation is limited. we're not taking capital away from conservation. this is new money going into conservation in all of the tools and technology that we make on the path to the extinction. we're giving to the world to governments to non profits. other engineers for free, so any non profit can use our technologies for spaces, preservation in helping save critically and danger or other endangered species. colossal has also been supporting researchers in australia since 2023. the focus
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there is on an animal with stripes like a tiger at a head similar to both. it was once the largest carnivorous marse appeal on the continent. with a set of teeth to pray on candles and wild rabbits. the silent scene is also known as the testimony and tiger. this film footage shows the last living specimen in a zoo. the after sheep were introduced to tasmania farmer, saw tasmanian tigers as enemies, and hunted them mercilessly. on september 7th, 1936. this animal died and with it, it's the seas. the remains of animals from his use are stored at the museums, victoria and melbourne. curator kevin ro is interested in the
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survey, and tigers are a symbol of extinction and loss and australia. and as we know, australia as the worst the extinction record from mammals of any country on earth with the 30 species last sense, european settlement in australia that has me and tiger is gone. it was an important predator on the let's try and landscape. and if we care about the functioning, where eco systems, we need to sustain the top predators in those systems. this man wants to help geneticist. andrew pass from the university of melbourne. he wants to revive the file a seen. others have has the same idea in the past, but the past is now being supported by colossal, with millions of dollars, and has newly developed technologies at his disposal. the scientist assisting to the largest collection of timeless scenes in the world.
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80 here where there are specimens of 32 of these animals in the melbourne museum. this invitation, that is like we're hoping that from some of these basements, we've looked at that a, some really nice impact the united way. and that we can sequence the entire gene, i'm as things, animals. and that really gives us the blue printing to the building blocks of what we need to recreate and bring these animals back home embryos preserved in alcohol, of which there are only 13 worldwide, 3 of them in melbourne. remarkably well preserved annual task also take samples from the specimens the antarctic, itemize the embryo labeled see 5757 is over a 100 years old and comes from the womb of a female preserved in the museum. it is well preserved and therefore
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a promising candidate for pasco plans. we still con, create life with the east mountain. so the way that the extinction works is you have to begin with was. so what do you do is you has to be able to get all the data nicely queens of your experience animal. and then once you have that, you compare it to own living animals. to find what is the closest weaving relative of the existing spacing embryo. see 5757 is the breakthrough in 2018. the blueprint of the tasmanian tiger was almost completely reconstructed for the 1st time. now andrew passed, good. his team begin their search for genetically closely related animal. the researchers at the university of melbourne have succeeded in finding a close relative of the tasmanian tiger. the
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fact hands narrow footage, marsupial, mouse, or gunner, which hears ancestry with the testimony and ty, for a comparison of its genetic material with the reconstructed dna reveals and astonishingly close relationship to the large creditor. the laboratory mice have many advantages for the project. the small animals are relatively common in the wild and have a short gestation period. they reproduce well and are easy to keep. this doubly valuable for research, special stylus in genes can be introduced into the cells of the done or using gene scissors. the fingers on carnivores are also suitable as surrogate mothers that carry the embryos of the testimony. and tiger is obviously a mess. the size difference in a donuts to, to it has many times. but this is one of the fantastic things about my see if it
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was these when they blown they. oh, really, really small. so that means when even i've done a cou, just face, and do best to a baby ties my name till i go. whether done it, koala or kangaroo. the embryos of all marsupials are about the same size and the room usually barely bigger than the grain of rice. they august birth to their off spring at a very early stage of development. after the to station period, the young crawled out of the birth opening in the mothers of domino for they should meet to the pouch climbing and attached themselves by the mouth to one of her teeth . well protected the young animals mature. it was the same with the style of the scene, with which jeans make a testimony and tiger tasmanian tiger. pictures of the skeleton and organs have been taken of all of the embryos task concentrates on typical characteristics. this
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note, the john, the strong hind legs, the or in comparable predators, such as the dog, like dingo, he finds, deem legions that are important for hunting praise. and these could also be decisive for the reconstruction of the test manian tigers. dna the researchers are studying which introduced has manian tiger genes trigger which changes using embryos manipulated in the laboratory that came originally from done arts. there are still many unanswered questions, but knowledge about the various stages of development is growing rapidly. the 1st has manian tigers. could be born in the next decade. did you, michael, of those changes are beginning to do with have a complete so i listen. it any differences that you would have from any wall follow
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the same? would be about the same, but any to animals in the fall listening population would have from each other all you and all i would have from each other. so at that point, i think you genuinely have us all the same, but you've been could put back into the eco system. it is not yet known whether the genetic makeup of the assign the scenes will be sufficient to enable them to survive in the wild. the reconstructed animals be released back into the wild at all. such as surface gold is so to speak, the decision maker as to who may live and who must dine interest. this is not the decision that people make, but one that they are overwhelmed by and finally, politics can now decide who can live and who must die. even golf wants us to have most. we manipulate the landscape way of playing gold when we drove the sentiment to extinction in the 1st place. we was certainly playing a band. and so i think what we're doing now is trying to correct some of those
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mistakes we made in the past. that would be extremely arrogant for someone to claim that uh yeah, we're just playing, we're not even playing. we're working at being engineers as what humans have been doing since we became new ones. we study the past, we plan for the future. we invent things. but now we're just doing our job. at stall is on a $122.00 to purchase a steam reference respect and humanity. a complete clean off is the complete opposite category because our going to say we can make what nature has produced ourselves. no longer seeing that perhaps we is part of the whole. i'm not in control of things the way we would always like to bring any so in the hunt, come do that and again present. so is it the case that we are not only making corrections, but we're also opening at pandora as box is being of, i'm sorry, going to be on less than this noise be to you and this noise homeless leads, so not been named us plus the front of these and, and working on t and in was the,
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in clear log on once in form, from leaving. and let's say i have fun this weekend us, we get to the, i'm on my find out what's my babies. here's the plant is also working with a max to look center in berlin to generate test, to bind all services, the research into stem cells as being carried out here. to create healthy excels the, let's see if it has grown cultures of skin tissue from 12 northern wide, fine. those that died in zoos. the living cells from tissue or blood are removed from a rhinoceros and preserved. they can be returned to an embryonic stage at any time using a cocktail of genes. the stem cells are then all wrong or cells from which any body cells can be cultivated. the certain
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starter proteins are added to stem cells mature into sperm or ex cells and a special culture medium. once researchers have successfully produce the mature accel from the skin cells, this is fertilized with frozen sperm from deceased mailed the, the resulting embryo can be implemented in a surrogate mother. the related southern white for an officer us and the cap she's carrying. the advantage is that the artificially produced and excels can be used to increase the genetic diversity of the future by no community. the research was would no longer have to rely solely on the again, needs of the 2 closely related females. however, they must ensure that all the aids used to not alter the genetic material of the egg cells produced the management's done so we can last time and i have made the
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stem cell. i carry out very thorough quality control to make sure that there is nothing in there that doesn't belong. bias must be all things. one is, after all, i want to have a healthy right now at some point and not feet something genetically modified. you the most of most of that is not the aim of my word of mine. i've, i've so far it has only been possible to produce excels precursors. they only mature when they are surrounded by a very in tissue. however, it is not possible to obtain this from living or deceased rhinos. the nourishing cell material must therefore also for us be cultivated. then you do some a t, but we have to use this method. it's already too late to do anything else on the unknown crop. then all other traditional species conservation measures have failed as to be void. it's simply the last chance to save the species this and we see it as a blueprint for other species that are similarly endangered. is insights flow pauses
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on those all can be induced dependents and time is of the essence because almost all or by no species are endangered long plus the so in the long term as a whole herd could be re establish this way for let's see. one is this individual good news from kenya. the surrogate mother of the southern white rhino is pregnant and the embryo has been growing for 2 months. the in december 2023. however, heavy rain sets and as a result, bacteria from the soil are flushed to the surface. the surrogate mother dies of poisoning and with her the embryo. the, the, the,
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the researches from berlin are left with only the dead fetus. the artificially created embryo lived in the room for $62.00 days. it was male and already 6.4 centimeters long. the the tissue samples as well as ultrasound examinations review, but he was perfectly healthy. the there was a 95 percent chance that the baby would have been born after a total of 16 months. the most ideally mixed feelings because we had never such beautiful it. that is fine, all and but on the other side, we would strongly prefer that it just in utah, as i'm going to a little one surrogate mother,
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was also healthy until her bacterial infection, the procedure had not harmed the mother. this lead in me is fetus. i was in my head was a really emotional moment, but it's on so the peasants and problematic scientifically to break. so you know, the successful effort will be presented at an international press conference in january 2024 including a 3 d model. 2 is our baby, the it has the name, the number one. now the team wants to implant a northern white rhino embryo into a surrogate mother that is really a milestone to allow us to produce and also my final cost in the next $22.00 and a half years. the success of the international by your rescue team is exemplary
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top researchers from all over the world. they're working on scientific benchmarks for future species, conservation in the tools that you need to do the extinction to bring an animal back exist to that you. so there is no magic, there is no, no technologies that we need to develop in order to make this a reality. the methods are getting better and better and a lot can be achieved with a lot of money. but they see that there's a lot of exciting spaces that could be very adaptive in the modern world. you just want to be very cautious that you know, create an invasive space. it remains controversial, whether there should be any new old species at all. i remember you and up 1000000 species threatened with extinction. second of we know exactly what needs to be done to save these pieces that's going in there now with such technological solutions as
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well intentioned and fascinating, but not really helpful. but you should sign whether biotechnology can now save nature remains controversial. i'd also like to, i can't see this as a contribution to nature conservation. describe what ground to be to address the drivers of the destruction of nature, done reconstructing individual speeds, the spend 100. or will it make sense to preserve nature and reconstruct animals in the future. we seem to find out was this, we, we assume that we will repair what has broken in the past and hopefully don't have to repair what will break in the future who comes up with good even if by you, engineers were able to produce northern wide find no caps again. these animals need intact habitats should other extinct species also return. the debate will only really get going if and when the 1st mammoths involves are actually born the. the
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really couldn't be watched the latest news 12, so we'll change. you can put some sliced chicken of 3 current use events in self titled videos. challenging jasmine was explained. quick and easy, short and sweet. find us on the w dot com, click on apply and social media. video news for manning, german quotes from sliced relentless journey. filming 30 years of chaos and hold the congo documentary about a decades long by neighboring countries. greed, the raw materials,
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the world's all too often silent in the face of tragedy. com empire of silence starts february 15th on dw, the . this is the news and these are a top stories, countries and organizations around the world have overwhelmingly rejected present. donald trump's plan to quote, take over the gaza strip. trump said the ravaged were ravaged coast strip would be redeveloped, and quote, the riviera of the middle east while palestinians would be re settled elsewhere. the white house later described the relocation as temporary. even many us allies say trumps idea violates international law and disregards the 2 state solution to the israeli palestinian conflict.
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