Will Cloning Ever Save Endangered Animals?

In 2009 the Brazilian Agricultural Research Corp. (Embrapa) and the Brasilia Zoological Garden began scavenging and freezing blood, sperm and umbilical cord cells from roadkill and other wild animals that had died, mostly in the Cerrado savanna--an incredibly diverse collection of tropical forest and grassland ecosystems home to at least 10,000 plant species and more than 800 species of birds and mammals, some of which live nowhere else in the world. Specimens were collected from the bush dog, collared anteater, bison and gray brocket deer, among other species. [More]
Source: Scientific American Topic - Stem Cell Research - Category: Stem Cells Tags: Technology,Chemistry,History of Science,Biotechnology,Technology,Biotechnology,Biology Source Type: news