the plan doesn't involve releasing clones into the wild, where they could undermine conservation by weakening their species' gene pool. Instead, clones would be used to supplement zoo populations and to assist with captive-breeding programs.
90 percent of cloning attempts failing
expensive and highly inefficient,"
While cloning endangered species is a relatively new pursuit, Brazilian scientists have been copying beef cattle for more than a decade.
"We are still in the phase of developing the technology, so we still don't know if it will be possible to rescue a population in the wild, but we could potentially make it viable again."
Brazilian biologists want to save different species by cloning animals. These people hope to save the species that way and put clones into zoo's and other places. They would not put them out into the wild because their they might weaken the species.
In this video it shows all of the negative and positive sides of cloning. It has some perspective and reasoning of why some people don't like animals to be cloned. It also shows the process of animal cloning.
This is just about how in the future, we might have a record of everyone's DNA/ Then, if you find DNA at a crime scene, you can immediately find out who it belongs to.
I am not sure which "media type" this fits into. Its basically just information about forensic DNA. Is it a science article, news broadcast, technique or opinion?