There is more to organisms than what is programmed into their genes; the social behavior and (dare I say) culture of wild mammoths is irretrievable and cannot be resurrected.[/QUOTE said:So very true.
There is more to organisms than what is programmed into their genes; the social behavior and (dare I say) culture of wild mammoths is irretrievable and cannot be resurrected.[/QUOTE said:So very true.
I guess you're right, but are we THAT confident in the practices being used today that the offspring will even survive? I may be proven wrong if/when they succeed, but as of now cloning is very iffy in success, since the DNA stays the same age as what it came from, which is why Dolly the sheep died prematurely. If it barely worked for Dolly the sheep, and not for long enough, what makes them think it will work for a species that's been long extinct. Is there some new cloning technique out there?
Don't take it personally I'm trying to point towards the potential flows in this hypothetical experiment, and the success of the clone differs by the source of cloning and the techniques used. I have looked into cloning before, and when I did nuclear transfer was the most common use, which in it's own doesn't work well all the time. Give me a source to correct me so I can strengthen/change my views before calling my argument useless and passing me off as an idiot.Of course you're welcome to your opinion. With due respect, however, putting forward lousy arguments without understanding the biology or goals of this research wastes everyone's time.
Don't take it personally I'm trying to point towards the potential flows in this hypothetical experiment, and the success of the clone differs by the source of cloning and the techniques used. I have looked into cloning before, and when I did nuclear transfer was the most common use, which in it's own doesn't work well all the time. Give me a source to correct me so I can strengthen/change my views before calling my argument useless and passing me off as an idiot.
Behaviour isn't pure though.
It is ever changing and as the world changes behaviour changes as well - the mammoths might be genetically pure; thus having all the potential of behaviour of the past.However how they'd choose and discover and learn how to behave toward would be different. Heck even "pure" mammoths would have changed behaviours through to modern times.
Sorry I just felt like your statement was an insult when I first saw it. I am no expert, and need to be shown I'm wrong to learn some things. Can you send me a link to the experiments proving that they will be able to clone something that survives as I am interested.Oh, and for what it's worth, there's a difference between passing someone off as an idiot and suggesting they don't know what they're talking about on this occasion. "With due respect" is still (a little) respectful.
Sorry I just felt like your statement was an insult when I first saw it. I am no expert, and need to be shown I'm wrong to learn some things. Can you send me a link to the experiments proving that they will be able to clone something that survives as I am interested.
In the mean time here is an article that talks about the other side of the argument.
http://io9.gizmodo.com/5865590/no-we-wont-be-able-to-clone-a-woolly-mammoth-in-the-next-five-years
I don't understand why they died out globally. Mammoth steppe still persists on the mainland of Asia (Altai-Saiyan). Home to saga and a conservative race/subspecies of reindeer - archaic dental traits suggest local neanderthal admixture was visible in the modern humans up till the Neolithic too. Something very Pleistocene still about that area though the Mammoth as a living animal is unknown to the present inhabitants.
Oddly cryptozoologists and folklorists have misattributed oral lore about Mammoth tusks to experiences with Elasmotherium. The one horn of the "cow" was the mammoths tusk and in art the Mammoth is depicted as a rhinoceros not as an elephant. For some reason as Mongoloid "Neobaikalians" moved north they remembered the rhinoceros from their homeland but not the elephant. Despite frozen elephants in permafrost the tusks became part of their folklore about aquatic cattle. By this time the elephants were extinct in Siberia.
In time it became the ki-lin of Chinese lore as the tusks travelled south. Despite the presence of Elephas maximus in China the Chinese did not make the connection to elephants, either.
I never did buy into overhunting myself: they were too similar to Elephas and Loxodonta in other realms besides NZ, Madagascar and especially oceanic island fauna are a poor analogy. There was long coexistence of mammoths and H. sapiens in Europe and Palearctic Asia, probably it was related to the decline of the mammoth steppe yet as I said suitable mammoth biome never disappeared in S Siberia. It's very odd.
Mammoth on the mainland most likely went extinct due to hunting by humans. There was a recent scientific article proving this by numbers, unfortunately I cannot find it again.
About the lost culture: I think, if you put a group of mammoth into the right environment they would relearn everything to survive pretty quickly. A lot is still in the genes.To hunt plants is not that difficult![]()
Overkill vs climate theories goes round in circles.
But mammoths and even mastodon were more like Asiatic and African elephants than moas or giant lemurs. Which is what overkill theory is modelled upon.
I'm not sure whether you're joking, but any individual resulting from this research would have neither the social environment nor genetics of a true mammoth.