Scientists plan to revive a bird that has been extinct since the seventeenth century
Scientists plan to revive a bird that has been extinct since the seventeenth century
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| The dodo, a flightless bird, was first spotted in the 1500s by Portuguese sailors and had disappeared by 1681. |
No other animal is as closely associated with extinction as the dodo, a strange-looking flightless bird that lived on the island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean until the late seventeenth century. The arrival of sailors brought with them invasive species such as rats and practices such as hunting. They wiped out the dodo, which showed no fear of humans, with extinction in just a few decades. Now, a team of scientists wants to bring back the dodo in a bold initiative that includes advances in ancient DNA sequencing, gene-editing technology and synthetic biology. They hope the project will open up new technologies for bird conservation.
"It's clear that we are in the midst of an extinction crisis. Beth Shapiro, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said. Shapiro is a paleontologist at Colossal Biosciences, a biotechnology and genetic engineering startup founded by tech entrepreneur Ben Lam and Harvard Medical School geneticist George Church, who is working on equally ambitious projects to bring back woolly mammoths and Tasmanian tigers, or Tasmanian tigers.Shapiro said she has already completed a major first step in the project — the entire sequence of the dodo's genome from ancient DNA — based on genetic material extracted from the remains of a dodo in Denmark. The next step was to compare the genetic information with the closest relatives of the dodo birds in the pigeon family - the living Nicobar pigeon, and the extinct Solitaire Rodrigues, a giant flightless pigeon that once lived on an island near Mauritius. Shapiro said it was a process that would allow them to narrow down mutations in the genome "that make the dodo a dodo."
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| The skeleton of a dodo bird is on display in a museum in Mauritius. |
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| Beth Shapiro, left, will lead the scientific effort to revive the dodo at Colossal Biosciences, founded by tech entrepreneur Ben Lam, to the right. |
Investing in Extinction
Whether Colossal and its team of scientists ultimately succeed in their quest for the return of the dodo and other extinct creatures, extinction elimination projects, and the technological breakthroughs they may generate, investors are excited. Colossal also announced on Tuesday that it has raised an additional $150 million, bringing the total funding raised since the company's launch in 2021 to $225 million. However, critics say the huge sums involved could be better used to protect 400 or so species of birds, and many other animals and plants listed as endangered."There are many things that desperately need our help. and money. Why would you bother trying to save something that has been a long time ago, when there are so many desperate things out right now? Julian Hume, a bird paleontologist at London's Natural History Museum, who studies the dodo.
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| The dodo is often portrayed as fleshy and undesirable. Hume believes that this illustration by the Mughal artist Ustad Mansur from about 1625 is the most accurate. |
Dodo myths
Hume said that little is known about the dodo and that many legends surround this creature. Even the origin of its name is mysterious, although it is believed to stem from the sound of the call that the bird is said to have made - a low-voiced sound resembling a pigeon. Millions of years ago, the ancestors of the dodo lived in Southeast Asia, and when sea levels were low, the island jumped its way to Mauritius, where it became isolated without predators once sea level rose.
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| The dodo has always been a source of fascination since its discovery. She appears as a character in Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland as explained by John Tennell. |





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