your holocene extinction series is great since you're covering influential animal extinctions, I think the next entry should be the golden toad, how it was discovered then shortly after it mysteriously went extinct
Oh! Thanks for the suggestion. I didn't know about the golden toad before but it sounds really interesting! Too bad this will be the last video in this series about a specific animal, the next 2 videos will cover biodiversity loss and de-extinction in broader detail. But I really appreciate the suggestion, I might look into it, thanks again!
@@FactorTrace they made some real advancements in the field of biology this was the first time a embryo from a diferent species was inplanted and born from a mother of a diferent species The tech developed during this project is still being developed today i think in a few years we might just see some animals come back from exinction
@@definitlynotbenlente7671 Yes, it's true. This was possible back then because they have collected and preserved the ibex's cell sample. Today, with genome editing, extinct animals without preserved cells might be able to be recreated. If you're interested, I've covered the topic of "de-extinction" in my new video.
@@FactorTrace i am a biology student interested in ecology and molecular biology (i know very diferent interest) Amd when i get my degree i would like to do research in cloning animals from preserved cell material and why the embryo from those cells do not always make viable organisms
The saddest part that little people even know about it! No of my biology school books (in elementary school, middle school and high school) even once mentioned this! Every time people talk about cloning extincy animal, they do it in context of dinosuars and mammoths - they are completely unwarae that it happened with recently extinct animal. Whole world knows name of Dolly, almost none knew Celia, despite her species was the only one de-extinct.
Thanks for the suggestion! The quagga is an interesting animal, but I'm already wrapping up the extinction series. I'll consider making a quagga video if I decide to make a second season for this.
There are plans to recreate this ibex subspecies, maybe the lack of funding or commercial potential for a long-term reintroduction program is the reason why it hasn't been done.
@@angelaputri982 offcourse it is. by years these things go easier. today people clone, cats, dogs, camels, monkeys, polo horses, mice, like it's regular thing. 2003 was way back. like i said 20 years in technology advances is big advancement. the only thing is does it get big enough funding. camels and polo horse clones get allot of money because they are used in sports and entertainment(is this ethical is another question)...if this project to bring back old spieces human wiped off would get similar cash ammounts coming in it would be easy.
@@angelaputri982 yes. it's just the succsess rate by % is low. it's like imagine throwing dice and getting 6 five times in a row. you don't throw like this everytime. as i understand this has been done thousands of times with other animals so they get more sucsess with them. E.g camels, polo horses.
This has to be one of the most underrated channels on TH-cam
agreed
Still working on getting more recognition! 😁
your holocene extinction series is great
since you're covering influential animal extinctions, I think the next entry should be the golden toad, how it was discovered then shortly after it mysteriously went extinct
Oh! Thanks for the suggestion. I didn't know about the golden toad before but it sounds really interesting! Too bad this will be the last video in this series about a specific animal, the next 2 videos will cover biodiversity loss and de-extinction in broader detail. But I really appreciate the suggestion, I might look into it, thanks again!
I can’t imagine the disappointment on their faces when the clone died.
Idk guy but at the start of the video I thought: This is the type of guy who would put sources in the description. And you did lol
Thanks! I'm glad I give off the "I include sources in the description" vibe. I think more channels should do the same.
both fascinating and tragic that an animal that was extinct became unextinct but only for 7 minutes
Yeah, cloning can come with some unwanted side effects, like organ deformities
@@FactorTrace they made some real advancements in the field of biology this was the first time a embryo from a diferent species was inplanted and born from a mother of a diferent species
The tech developed during this project is still being developed today i think in a few years we might just see some animals come back from exinction
@@definitlynotbenlente7671 Yes, it's true. This was possible back then because they have collected and preserved the ibex's cell sample.
Today, with genome editing, extinct animals without preserved cells might be able to be recreated. If you're interested, I've covered the topic of "de-extinction" in my new video.
@@FactorTrace i am a biology student interested in ecology and molecular
biology (i know very diferent interest)
Amd when i get my degree i would like to do research in cloning animals from preserved cell material and why the embryo from those cells do not always make viable organisms
@@definitlynotbenlente7671 Oh, good luck to you in achieving your dreams!
The saddest part that little people even know about it! No of my biology school books (in elementary school, middle school and high school) even once mentioned this! Every time people talk about cloning extincy animal, they do it in context of dinosuars and mammoths - they are completely unwarae that it happened with recently extinct animal. Whole world knows name of Dolly, almost none knew Celia, despite her species was the only one de-extinct.
Was tissue extracted from the kid? Did they try again? What's the next step?
Could you do a video on the extinct song bird called the Kauai Òò?
Thanks for the suggestion, I'll look into it in the future and see if I can make a video about it!
4:11 lets hope we can succeed
Good vid ❤
Thank you! 😃
Can you do an episode on an Arizonan extinct animal?
Does that mean the pyreanian ibex has two endlings?
Yes, and technically speaking based on their genome, both of them are the same individual.
Can you do a video on the quagga?
Thanks for the suggestion! The quagga is an interesting animal, but I'm already wrapping up the extinction series. I'll consider making a quagga video if I decide to make a second season for this.
Fascinating
very bizarre story
NAHH THIS GUY HAS LESS THAN 2K SUBS?
why not clone again, 20 years have passed the tech probably is more solid.
There are plans to recreate this ibex subspecies, maybe the lack of funding or commercial potential for a long-term reintroduction program is the reason why it hasn't been done.
@@FactorTracebut, it's still possible to recreate again right?
@@angelaputri982 offcourse it is. by years these things go easier. today people clone, cats, dogs, camels, monkeys, polo horses, mice, like it's regular thing. 2003 was way back. like i said 20 years in technology advances is big advancement. the only thing is does it get big enough funding. camels and polo horse clones get allot of money because they are used in sports and entertainment(is this ethical is another question)...if this project to bring back old spieces human wiped off would get similar cash ammounts coming in it would be easy.
@@angelaputri982 yes. it's just the succsess rate by % is low. it's like imagine throwing dice and getting 6 five times in a row. you don't throw like this everytime. as i understand this has been done thousands of times with other animals so they get more sucsess with them. E.g camels, polo horses.
Sad!!! 😞
❣
They can bring em back
😭😭
Ada indonesia coy
Maksudnya ada Indonesia?
To the person who says first, i say "well i outta here"
1st touch it 1st
Extinct once again😂 what a miserable animal.