Would you pay $150,000 to duplicate
your dog??
First, who has that kind of cash to just throw around?!
After all, cloned animals or people are not the real thing, no matter how much they look like the source material. Nothing can't replace the original. But even if they were able to clone them complete with memory and personality, aren't there enough amazing dogs in the world to adopt?
Edgar and Nina Otto—Florida - who have nine other dogs, 10 cats, six sheep and four parrots in West Boca (no kidding)—thought otherwise. That's why they paid that much cash to clone Lancelot—their beloved Labrador—who died from cancer. A company called BioArts International—partnering with South Korean researcher Dr Hwang Woo-suk—created Lancelot Encore, which is the actual name of Lancelot 2.0.
Or better said, Lancelot 1.0 Remastered.
Woo-suk took the genetic material from the original Lancelot—which was extracted when the couple learnt he had cancer—and replaced the genetic material of an egg from a Korean breed similar to the Labrador. After implanting it into a surrogate mother, the cloned Lancelot was born. After that, he was shipped to Miami International, where he became the first single-birth commercial dog clone ever in the United States, according to his parents.
According to Edgard and Nina, he's exactly like the real thing!
1 comment:
I love my dog, but I couldn't spend that much to clone him.
Too bad they couldn't take that much money and donate it to a shelter.
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