It runs about $50,000 for a dog, with a 20% success rate, and there are numerous ethical considerations This article is reprinted by permission from NextAvenue.org. The clock started ticking more than 20 years ago when the world said, "Hello, Dolly," to the globe's first cloned sheep. At that point, it was only a matter of time before producing genetic duplicates of all sorts of animals would ...
'Genetics ain't everything': You can clone your dog or cat, but should ...
For a while he was in partnership with the US-based BioArts, the successor to Genetic Savings and Clone (sic), founded by Lou Hawthorne , a Californian entrepreneur who aimed to clone his mother’s dog, using her billionaire boyfriend’s money. Hwang made four clones and Hawthorne kept one, who lived to be twelve and a half and was much loved.
Yahoo: I Paid $50,000 to Clone My Dog. Here's What It's Really Like
I Paid $50,000 to Clone My Dog. Here's What It's Really Like
Yahoo: Would You Pay Fifty Thousand Dollars to Clone Your Dog? Here’s How It Works
Would You Pay Fifty Thousand Dollars to Clone Your Dog? Here’s How It Works
Hawk Central: Tom Brady cloned his dog instead of rescuing one. Now I like him even less. | Opinion
Tom Brady cloned his dog instead of rescuing one. Now I like him even less. | Opinion
NBC News: Want to clone your dog? Don't expect an exact replica
You love your dog or cat. Someday your dog or cat will die. (I’m sorry, but it’s inevitable.) What if you could put aside the genetic materials to make a perfect copy of your beloved animal, a clone ...