Saturday, March 02, 2024 – China has claimed to have successfully cloned two goats, and they plan on using the cloned animals to harvest wool.
Scientists working under Xi Jingping's plan to succeed the
Western world in technological advancements believe they have successfully
cloned two Tibetan goats.
It marks the very first time the success has ever been seen
globally.
The cloning means Chinese farmers can use the extra animals
to harvest further furs, used in the cashmere wool trade.
Su Jianmin, the chief scientist leading the cloning
programme, has since claimed the team were successful in birthing a pair of
cloned goats in Qinghai, northwest China.
A team of researchers at the Northwest A&F University
were hard at work on somatic cell cloning.
Chief Jianmin said: "Two cloned goats have been born in
Qinghai. The firstborn weighed 3.4 kilograms [7.4 pounds] and is healthy."
Details on the project are scant and China is unlikely to
release any more unless a peer-reviewed paper is published, LiveScience
reported.
Chinese media did release a video of the cloned kid, whose
birth was part of a somatic cell cloning project, the details of which are few
and far between.
Somatic cell cloning sees the nucleus of a somatic cell
inserted into an egg cell which has been stripped of its own nuclei.
Reconstructed cell work can then be stimulated, causing cell division and
eventual development of an organism.
Similar somatic cell trials got underway in previous years,
most notably with Dolly the Sheep.
The sheep, which was grown and formed from the mammary gland
of a sheep, was the first mammal cloned under somatic cell sciences. Born on
July 5, 1996, and dying on February 14, 2003, Dolly the Sheep marked an
incredible breakthrough. Dolly birthed several lambs throughout their life and
died of a lung disease unlinked to the cloning process.
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