Having dodos as an available food source would make paleolithic lifestyle more viable which is an important aspect of de-extinction that is overlooked.
Don't be fooled - they aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. The reality is that the genes they will be introducing are guestimations from their comparative analyses between the Asian elephant and the mammoth - in any case, they will be constructing the genes completely artificially using the nucleotide sequences derived from what little remains of recovered mammoth DNA. This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
Don't repeat the same words - " life will find a way" that was said in the movie. You didnt even knew that before watching it.Use your originality man. Also, saying so doesn't make you a scientist. You tend to be floating on the thought as if you are a Jurassic park scientist. For that to happen, go study through proper channel and come
Don't be fooled - they aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. The reality is that the genes they will be introducing are guestimations from their comparative analyses between the Asian elephant and the mammoth - in any case, they will be constructing the genes completely artificially using the nucleotide sequences derived from what little remains of recovered mammoth DNA. This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
And it is all getting started with the Russian family of scientists that are building Pleistocene park with currently surviving animals adapted and suitable for the arctic tundra. The way it works, is that the large herbivores, during winter, ruffle the snow to look for food. In the process, they allow the freezing cold temperatures of the air to reach the ground, without being insulated by a blanket of snow, along with the animals weight compacting the remaining snow, which creates and maintains permafrost, along with natural carbon sequestration. At ski resorts, a similar effect happens with all the skiing and snowboarding that compact snow, compared to softer drifts, combined with the grassland grazing ecology of large grazing herbivores, like bison, that are in the park, along with all the ruffling around of snow, keeping it from piling up too deep, while pressing the remaining snow with their weight. The whole purpose of Pleistocene park, is to rebuild that natural ecosystem to save the permafrost from melting, and cause a runaway feedback loop that could make climate change worse.
i hope they bring back dodos first. logistically they'd probably be easiest to accommodate as a long-term captive population, being small omnivorous birds rather than mid-size obligate carnivores or highly specialized megafauna, but other than that they're extremely cute. you can't tell me the public wouldn't be wild for footage of a fledgling dodo waddling around playing with a jingle-ball toy.
I believe they anticipate to finish the mammoth first as it was the first one they started and estimate to have first calves in 2028. Unsure if they have a timeline for thylacine and dodo yet
@@Leox27 I am hoping that for the North American context, the passenger pigeon is also a work in progress as previous videos suggested. Being from California, I am tempted to ask for the California grizzly bear to be on the list, (even if surviving grizzly bears are probably closely related enough to be standing ecological surrogates), once we Californians network wildlife corridor, and we accept them besides having it be the emblem of our flag. I have a feeling that grizzly Bears are more than capable of being vicious, pig hunters as Eurasian Brown bear are with California’s feral pig/wild boar hybrid population. Other than that, basic bear safety, and precaution from our rising black bears, in plenty of wildlife connectivity will be needed to re except our grizzly bears.
I hope that they use the same technology to save other functionally extinct animals such as the Baiji, Yangtze Giant Softshell Turtle, Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, and Vaquita if the Northern White Rhino project is successful.
But woolly mammoths, for example, when extinct mostly because of climate and environmental change, maybe helped by human hunting. How can our re-creating something similar be constructive? They could never be returned to the wild.
To my knowledge their extinction was almost entirely due to human hunting. The arctic circle is still a fantastic place for them, not too dissimilar to the world and climates they occupied prior to extinction. From tundra plains to Siberian forests, there is plenty of real estate in the wild for them. While their natural climate is much smaller than it once was, it certainly still exists albeit with several thousands of years of forward evolution after their extinction, which frankly isn’t all that much. In fact, part of the plan is to reintroduce them to the wild and sustain a healthy population once technological/intellectual advancements allow it
Both Siberia and Northern Canada have suitable habitat for sure, maybe bits of Alaska, Greenland, and the southern tail of South America near Tierra del Fuego, and possibly parts of the Himalayas or Alps have enough of the sweet spot of temperature and forage to support a population of mammoth. In 20-30 years, the mayor of Yakutsk will be a mammoth. 🦣
I don't think humans had a hand in their extinction, they were suited for a specific type of terrain/climate that changed and caused their end. While I'm sure there are areas where they might survive I don't think we should bring them back even if we could and the reasoning being our greed. They might not survive in the wild which means they'd spend their time in a zoo as an attraction, which is horrible. The only time we should ever consider bringing something back that is extinct is because if we had a hand in it and only then. I also fail to see how they would solve genetic diversity, unless they made them sterile and cloned them in a lab. It really sounds horrible, imagine a few million years from now when we're probably extinct and some aliens manage to find us, bring a couple of us back to spend our time in a prison for their amusement. To me that's a fate worse than death, wouldn't want to inflict that on anything that is living or has lived. Let me clarify why I don't think we caused the extinction of the mammoths, we all originated from Africa and the elephants aren't extinct. Then again many species similar to us existed and they no longer do and we probably had a hand in that. Should we bring them back?
Actually several species alive today are still adapted for a world with mammoths. Locust trees have spines to protect them from mammoths, Osage-oranges have seeds that were carried by mammoths, brown-headed cowbirds likely perched on mammoths and fed on their ticks and fleas
It's fun to talk about the exciting possibilities. It's less fun to find the money for such a long term project. The job means creating 1000 to 3000 viable mammoths and sustaining them forever..
Our desperation is touching, and perhaps these are all good endeavors, and perhaps they'll wake us up to de-evolving our ruinous human habits that cause so much trouble in the first place.
I am deeply moved by the promise of these technologies, on both emotional and practical levels. We can, in a manner of speaking, both atone for our our destructive behavior, and pre-empt some of the worst catastrophic consequences of our poor stewardship in the process. We owe it to the creatures we have destroyed and injured and to our posterity. What better use of advanced technology could there be? When this is done I believe that it will seize the imagination of millions of people who will want to play a role in this new method of conservation. It will attract funding and augment current efforts at conservation and revitalization of animals and their habitats. It will be more significant that the moon landing.
The shape and size of the ears are very similar in mammoths and Indian elephants ! The shape of the head is also much more similar than in the African elephant. Indian elephants, when their frontal bones are enlarged, are extremely similar to mammoths. Indian elephants also often have more hair on them, especially when they are young, which is much closer to mammoths. And this closeness is seen in the genes. To get something as close as possible to a mammoth or 100% mammoth, the process should go like this. The egg cell and sperm of Indian elephants must be kept for 3 days in a different field of mild static electricity that unlocks ancient and dormant parts of the genetic material, namely deoxyribonucleic acid. Such cells should be combined into a fertilized egg cell of an Indian elephant, implanted into a female Indian elephant. The former can perhaps be enhanced by having the fertilized egg cell stay in the field I mentioned for 3 days, and it also simulates the once strong protective electromagnetic field of the Earth, which has been weakening for thousands of years. The electromagnetic field activates the DNA of the creature because DNA is the computer record of life, something similar to overclocking the processor in a computer, but in this case we are only restoring the original speed that has decreased. The Indian elephant born in this way will have prominent archaic features and will closely resemble a mammoth. In such creatures, through certain genetic therapies, parts of mammoth DNA that are not damaged could be inserted, for example by replacing parts of Indian elephant DNA in stem cells with the mammoth genome in DNA printers. Therapy with such stem cells will further enhance the features of the Indian elephant, which will certainly no longer look like it is from this time.
This is really cool! I have interest in animals and it's amazing to think I could see extinct animals I only read on encyclopedias, It sounds like fiction but I hope this de-extinction project is a success, I'm excited!
It would be great to be able to do the same for coral reef ecosystems but yes we sure need to get the DNA and identify what has not already gone extinct. Krill and whales also needed for the production of the oxygen we and all other life planet wide need.
I sure could use a new pancreas.... And I'd love to see a wholly mammoth. I live 40 mins from mastadon ridge... Maybe bring those big buggers back too. Your company is awesome.
You are such an amazing bugger. So if you bring back those big buggers too, how could many buggers possibly co exist??? Is it going to become " buggers paradise" or a " bugger world"
@@IndoBrown well I guess they predate the mammoth a bit but I'm sure a habitat could be located in the vast acreage of Canada. I have confidence they could co exist with each other, with man... Might be another story.
@@IndoBrown I admit you really can't. That got me thinking about the ethics of doing so... But philosophically I think that if it can happen it probably will. Like all of nature is full of possible paths that may or may not occur or interact... As humans we touch all those paths of all living creatures... And now we reach into the past ...perhaps we are just the implements of chaos. It could be good, or be our very downfall. Perhaps in the long run it won't matter at all... But I do see your point.
It wouldn't be impossible to backbreed dinosaurs. Birds already contain the genes necessary to produce a tail, fingers, and teeth, and you can also deactivate the gene for beak formation.
@1Anime4you Even if were possible, it would possibly take multiple generations. There are ongoing efforts to backbreed for the Auroch and Quagga from Cows and Zebras that are still not quite there yet.
@@sffb8295 So? We're speaking theoretically here. And as I said, scientists have already been successful in reactovating the tooth gene in birds, so it's far from a long shot.
it would be really nice if they could vision reject just one extinct species it seems like there is talk about it, but never seen it yet. Hopefully they can.
But woolly mammoths, for example, when extinct mostly because of climate and environmental change. How will re-creating something similar be constructive?
problem with the Dodo is that it only produced 1 egg at a time and was supposedly not a tasty bird and would not fare well in a country with predators.
Hey Beth the ecologist!!! All your fancy body movements, giggling aside, let's ponder and talk Being an ecologist myself, okay, with the current extinction rates due to anthropogenic means, is deextinction really required? We are already struggling with the species that we have in several degrading ecosystems. With current and frequent habitat changes, do you really think substantial and stable habitat is available for WM, DD and Thylacine? Aside the dodo and Thylacine, the paleo climate of the mammoth is considerably different from the current( given the rapid changes) With the extent of global warming, pollution, habitat loss, invasives and such, could the mammoth withstand such behemoth changes Mammoth!mammoth! mammoth!!!! Behold the joy of Asagoth, the poacher. How do you intend to address this?
As far as I’m concerned as a observer, that’s been educating myself with the videos, old and new; the larger context we should all be concerned about is the health of the entire ecosystem and how the plants and animals interact in continuity with their natural history. In terms of the woolly mammoth, there is an admittedly dated TED talk video I’ve been listening to, that argues that the woolly mammoth was quite adaptable, (or plastic as described in the video), during it’s time on earth. It migrated across the Bering land bridge, Eurasia, and North America during a number of glacial peaks, and survived on a few islands until they didn’t during the dawn of modern civilization. After briefly volunteering in Wolf conservation and exploring a new career path with the savory Institute, that also argues for the larger ecological context when it comes to agriculture and desertification; my views on the larger ecological context we’re affirmed in the process. For poaching, there is very much the possible need to enforce and update current endangered species policy, let alone have the breeders take cues from standard conservation that have helped endangered species rebound to a large degree with the newer tools available as suggested.
@@rypatmackrock looking and educating with videos is one aspect. In the first place, the viability of the animals is questionable. The plasticity of mammoths in the past cannot be equated with that of the present. Remember endangered animals who are still out there are different from extinct animals and cannot even be compared for initiating the deextinction process. You are no expert in the field and what ever you are talking about are those borrowed from movie dialogues and the videos. So I would urge you to stop acting like a scientist. Volunteering bla bla bla reaches nowhere near to actual researching. I would also urge people to Not copy paste the ideas and findings of actual researchers and resonate them as their own One can always have their views and express, which I agree, but not in every thing. These days information is exposed cheaply in the name of “internet” and every one ( public) starts acting funnily. This is the curse of modern day innovation. Finally, you don’t and any body for that matter ride high with a couple of small betterments achieved in the process and act as though “ every thing is possible and feasible” Let’s assume for a moment, Even if the mammoth after de extinction, did survive in certain pockets, man does not have the habit of being quiet thereafter. A mammoth initiative in the name of mammoth tourism and what not would emerge. It’s all “ money matters” at the end of the day Man is too weird and you must expect the least normal from him
As much as I wish we could revive non avian dinosaurs, they would have no natural ecosystem and not be able to exist without damage to existing ecosystems as well as the fact that I do not believe humans deserve the animals they have already
@dungeonsanddragonsbutformo9835 They are also simply too big and would likely not be able to breath in modern atmosphere. Something like the T-rex would also get itself killed of exhaustion or hunger due to how many times they would need to hunt per day to sustain themselves.
Yes a single cross bred woolly mammoth x elephant will be concocted in a lab then of course live out a "happy life" alone with a life of experimentation 🤷♂️
Fantastic Speaker! Muted, she surges forward and just jumps in. Her body language conveys excitement, intelligence, and confidence. I think some nerves show as she shifts her weight from leg to leg. But she may just be used to talking from behind a podium.
Yes, this technology can be use to benefit many. However, this same technology can be used in bad way to bring about unbelievable unanticipated harm to millions. Think about the military applications of such a thing. Man is on this inevitable trajectory time will reveal what happen in reality.
This is really cool and all, but shouldn't first we focus on the species going extinct right now? Perhaps all those extinct Pleistocene animals should remain extinct as a reminder for us to take care of what we have now?
They are soo there not talked about for it but they are working on using gene editing to help genetic diversity soo a few animals will be like blue spix macaw well known for alot of inbreeding and colossal is finna help with that
@respecteverybodynohate9637 Could it also lead to the technology being used to save animals in similar situations such as the Baiji, Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, Vaquita, and Yangtze Giant Softshell Turtle?
But be careful. As Malcolm would say, “But your scientists were so preoccupied with whetherr or not they could, they didn’t stop to think whether they should.”
Don't be fooled - they aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. The reality is that the genes they will be introducing are guestimations from their comparative analyses between the Asian elephant and the mammoth - in any case, they will be constructing the genes completely artificially using the nucleotide sequences derived from what little remains of recovered mammoth DNA. This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
Science takes time, and while we work on it, we're also saving species today through our Colossal Foundation and conservation efforts. Check it out here colossalfoundation.org/
Sure..humans are so wise and put aside their differences to work together all the time so why wouldn't something this complex and difficult with no forseable profit involved in it, work like magic ?
They key is to market it in such a way to attract investors. They aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
Hmm thats very smart to see dinosaur dna things well for sure if we use dna of monitor lizard or reptile dna and use gecko freeker necked lizard and bearded lizard and use frog dna mixing them all together you might get for chance an new reptile that i might call as AO-reptile they are hybrids so hybrids so as we made 7 hybrids of animals made by greedy zookeepers of zoos we have zonkeys tigons ligers and any others that helps us to identify about finding the new species of animals that will change their species into new which lets them to survive during future but we cannot ever do these to ourselves as were higher intelligent primates known to exist we invented everything
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I see no evidence to have confgidence in this project or this woman. These three creatures would make no difference to anything. Still cool if it could be done. is there any progress to justify these people getting paid? How long before something happens? its this a humbug? if its that easyt why not save so many numbers of creatures close to exctinction/ they don't do that.
Well, the thing is, they aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. The reality is that the genes they will be introducing are guestimations from their comparative analyses between the Asian elephant and the mammoth - in any case, they will be constructing the genes completely artificially using the nucleotide sequences derived from what little remains of recovered mammoth DNA. This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
But woolly mammoths, for example, when extinct mostly because of climate and environmental change. How will re-creating something similar be constructive?
They almost certainly were driven to extinction by homo sapiens. There have been interglacial periods before, none have had anything like the rate of megafaunal extinction as the current one. Even the evidence from Wrangel island is now suggesting the mammoth population was stable until humans turned up.
Her explanation is so easy to understood!
Asian elephants have 98% DNA of a mammoth.
But... Piigs have 98% of human DNA. Ups... Can she make humans from pigs?
@@hotbit7327 Hmm ... Probably. I bet there would be less interest in that though
I really can't wait for the resurrection of the woolly mammoth, thylacine, and dodos. Life will find a way.
Having dodos as an available food source would make paleolithic lifestyle more viable which is an important aspect of de-extinction that is overlooked.
Life will find away to die.
Don't be fooled - they aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. The reality is that the genes they will be introducing are guestimations from their comparative analyses between the Asian elephant and the mammoth - in any case, they will be constructing the genes completely artificially using the nucleotide sequences derived from what little remains of recovered mammoth DNA.
This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
Don't repeat the same words - " life will find a way" that was said in the movie. You didnt even knew that before watching it.Use your originality man.
Also, saying so doesn't make you a scientist. You tend to be floating on the thought as if you are a Jurassic park scientist. For that to happen, go study through proper channel and come
New burgers life will find a way
Woolley mammoths would be extremely useful. I learned in a TH-cam video that they can provide help with cooling the planet.
Don't be fooled - they aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. The reality is that the genes they will be introducing are guestimations from their comparative analyses between the Asian elephant and the mammoth - in any case, they will be constructing the genes completely artificially using the nucleotide sequences derived from what little remains of recovered mammoth DNA.
This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
And it is all getting started with the Russian family of scientists that are building Pleistocene park with currently surviving animals adapted and suitable for the arctic tundra.
The way it works, is that the large herbivores, during winter, ruffle the snow to look for food. In the process, they allow the freezing cold temperatures of the air to reach the ground, without being insulated by a blanket of snow, along with the animals weight compacting the remaining snow, which creates and maintains permafrost, along with natural carbon sequestration.
At ski resorts, a similar effect happens with all the skiing and snowboarding that compact snow, compared to softer drifts, combined with the grassland grazing ecology of large grazing herbivores, like bison, that are in the park, along with all the ruffling around of snow, keeping it from piling up too deep, while pressing the remaining snow with their weight.
The whole purpose of Pleistocene park, is to rebuild that natural ecosystem to save the permafrost from melting, and cause a runaway feedback loop that could make climate change worse.
I'm a big fan of her
a big fan
Very interesting narration. I love your enthusiasm for your subject. Best wishes to you and your mission!
AI, Space exploration, de-extinction. What a time to be alive.
i hope they bring back dodos first. logistically they'd probably be easiest to accommodate as a long-term captive population, being small omnivorous birds rather than mid-size obligate carnivores or highly specialized megafauna, but other than that they're extremely cute. you can't tell me the public wouldn't be wild for footage of a fledgling dodo waddling around playing with a jingle-ball toy.
I believe they anticipate to finish the mammoth first as it was the first one they started and estimate to have first calves in 2028. Unsure if they have a timeline for thylacine and dodo yet
@@Leox27 I am hoping that for the North American context, the passenger pigeon is also a work in progress as previous videos suggested.
Being from California, I am tempted to ask for the California grizzly bear to be on the list, (even if surviving grizzly bears are probably closely related enough to be standing ecological surrogates), once we Californians network wildlife corridor, and we accept them besides having it be the emblem of our flag. I have a feeling that grizzly Bears are more than capable of being vicious, pig hunters as Eurasian Brown bear are with California’s feral pig/wild boar hybrid population.
Other than that, basic bear safety, and precaution from our rising black bears, in plenty of wildlife connectivity will be needed to re except our grizzly bears.
On their insta it looks like they are doing the thylacine first!
Yummy!
I hope that they use the same technology to save other functionally extinct animals such as the Baiji, Yangtze Giant Softshell Turtle, Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, and Vaquita if the Northern White Rhino project is successful.
Dr Beth Shapiro explained everything in a very easy to understand manner
Love to see the Sabre tooth cat return
Holding out for that wholly mammoth. I've always wanted to see one.
Movie plots playing out right before our eyes , cross genetics , mutant hybrids , what a world ..
Full support from India
Global warming is getting worse, I hope the plan can proceed faster to help the Earth
i hope i get to see this in my lifetime!
But woolly mammoths, for example, when extinct mostly because of climate and environmental change, maybe helped by human hunting. How can our re-creating something similar be constructive? They could never be returned to the wild.
To my knowledge their extinction was almost entirely due to human hunting. The arctic circle is still a fantastic place for them, not too dissimilar to the world and climates they occupied prior to extinction. From tundra plains to Siberian forests, there is plenty of real estate in the wild for them. While their natural climate is much smaller than it once was, it certainly still exists albeit with several thousands of years of forward evolution after their extinction, which frankly isn’t all that much. In fact, part of the plan is to reintroduce them to the wild and sustain a healthy population once technological/intellectual advancements allow it
Both Siberia and Northern Canada have suitable habitat for sure, maybe bits of Alaska, Greenland, and the southern tail of South America near Tierra del Fuego, and possibly parts of the Himalayas or Alps have enough of the sweet spot of temperature and forage to support a population of mammoth. In 20-30 years, the mayor of Yakutsk will be a mammoth. 🦣
I don't think humans had a hand in their extinction, they were suited for a specific type of terrain/climate that changed and caused their end. While I'm sure there are areas where they might survive I don't think we should bring them back even if we could and the reasoning being our greed. They might not survive in the wild which means they'd spend their time in a zoo as an attraction, which is horrible. The only time we should ever consider bringing something back that is extinct is because if we had a hand in it and only then. I also fail to see how they would solve genetic diversity, unless they made them sterile and cloned them in a lab. It really sounds horrible, imagine a few million years from now when we're probably extinct and some aliens manage to find us, bring a couple of us back to spend our time in a prison for their amusement. To me that's a fate worse than death, wouldn't want to inflict that on anything that is living or has lived.
Let me clarify why I don't think we caused the extinction of the mammoths, we all originated from Africa and the elephants aren't extinct. Then again many species similar to us existed and they no longer do and we probably had a hand in that. Should we bring them back?
@@hulduprobably they did not, but now they will
Actually several species alive today are still adapted for a world with mammoths. Locust trees have spines to protect them from mammoths, Osage-oranges have seeds that were carried by mammoths, brown-headed cowbirds likely perched on mammoths and fed on their ticks and fleas
It's fun to talk about the exciting possibilities. It's less fun to find the money for such a long term project. The job means creating 1000 to 3000 viable mammoths and sustaining them forever..
Our desperation is touching, and perhaps these are all good endeavors, and perhaps they'll wake us up to de-evolving our ruinous human habits that cause so much trouble in the first place.
when i get older i want work at this company i am a huge animal fan
you could say... a colossal fan ?
I'll see myself out ..🧍♂🚪
@@CYDAmityno come back! You’ve won the dad jokes award 🥇👴🏼
That's so great! That's the company I'm working to work for;!
Don't dream too much man!
Too good to be true.. hope they can do what they say
this is a crazy undertaking, but the possible benefits are even crazier
I am deeply moved by the promise of these technologies, on both emotional and practical levels. We can, in a manner of speaking, both atone for our our destructive behavior, and pre-empt some of the worst catastrophic consequences of our poor stewardship in the process. We owe it to the creatures we have destroyed and injured and to our posterity. What better use of advanced technology could there be? When this is done I believe that it will seize the imagination of millions of people who will want to play a role in this new method of conservation. It will attract funding and augment current efforts at conservation and revitalization of animals and their habitats. It will be more significant that the moon landing.
Isn't a wooly mammoth larger than an elephant though? Would an Asian elephant be able to support the size of a mammoth fetus growing inside her?
They are actually comparative in size to african bush elefantants still a bit larger than asian elefants but it is feasible
7:30 no designer babies?
You really should have some merch we can buy
Just ordered the book.
Very interesting. I hope to see more videos like this.
This is so exciting, I wish they had the extra personnel and material to expedite the process.
Intelligence and charm. I'm sold on their idea! 🙂
04:05 sad 😢
Very intriguing! Would be cool to see where this goes
Please clone terror birds i really would like to breed them for home security lol
Did she leave her academic post at UCSC?? and her lab?
Probably private industry is where the money is. She is well-coiffed
The shape and size of the ears are very similar in mammoths and Indian elephants ! The shape of the head is also much more similar than in the African elephant. Indian elephants, when their frontal bones are enlarged, are extremely similar to mammoths. Indian elephants also often have more hair on them, especially when they are young, which is much closer to mammoths. And this closeness is seen in the genes. To get something as close as possible to a mammoth or 100% mammoth, the process should go like this. The egg cell and sperm of Indian elephants must be kept for 3 days in a different field of mild static electricity that unlocks ancient and dormant parts of the genetic material, namely deoxyribonucleic acid. Such cells should be combined into a fertilized egg cell of an Indian elephant, implanted into a female Indian elephant. The former can perhaps be enhanced by having the fertilized egg cell stay in the field I mentioned for 3 days, and it also simulates the once strong protective electromagnetic field of the Earth, which has been weakening for thousands of years. The electromagnetic field activates the DNA of the creature because DNA is the computer record of life, something similar to overclocking the processor in a computer, but in this case we are only restoring the original speed that has decreased. The Indian elephant born in this way will have prominent archaic features and will closely resemble a mammoth. In such creatures, through certain genetic therapies, parts of mammoth DNA that are not damaged could be inserted, for example by replacing parts of Indian elephant DNA in stem cells with the mammoth genome in DNA printers. Therapy with such stem cells will further enhance the features of the Indian elephant, which will certainly no longer look like it is from this time.
One thing you might not have considered is that the oral histories refer to mammoths as “Atix” or maneaters.
This is so amazing and so exciting!!!
How can someone apply to work in the project?
Just keep your vision and don't lose track
This is the coolest thing ever
This is really cool! I have interest in animals and it's amazing to think I could see extinct animals I only read on encyclopedias, It sounds like fiction but I hope this de-extinction project is a success, I'm excited!
I hope she also bring back the Kaua'i'o'o bird
It would be great to be able to do the same for coral reef ecosystems but yes we sure need to get the DNA and identify what has not already gone extinct. Krill and whales also needed for the production of the oxygen we and all other life planet wide need.
this is like nature's nostalgia bait (in a good way)
Can colossal help with saving our orcas???
Nice marketing speech.
Asian elephants have 98% DNA of a mammoth.
Piigs have also 98% of human DNA. Ups...
They have these tools because they first made them and used them on living animals. The military has had this tech for decades.
How will the discovery of the freeze-dried preserved woolly mammoth chromosomes affect your project?
Incredibly cool!
I sure could use a new pancreas.... And I'd love to see a wholly mammoth. I live 40 mins from mastadon ridge... Maybe bring those big buggers back too. Your company is awesome.
You are such an amazing bugger. So if you bring back those big buggers too, how could many buggers possibly co exist???
Is it going to become " buggers paradise" or a " bugger world"
@@IndoBrown well I guess they predate the mammoth a bit but I'm sure a habitat could be located in the vast acreage of Canada. I have confidence they could co exist with each other, with man... Might be another story.
@@OswaldCampbellHow can you ever tell with confidence about an animal which has not lived along side you and is known only from fossils
@@IndoBrown I admit you really can't. That got me thinking about the ethics of doing so... But philosophically I think that if it can happen it probably will. Like all of nature is full of possible paths that may or may not occur or interact... As humans we touch all those paths of all living creatures... And now we reach into the past ...perhaps we are just the implements of chaos. It could be good, or be our very downfall. Perhaps in the long run it won't matter at all... But I do see your point.
DoDos are pigeons that evolved in relative isolation and became giants due to very specific conditions. What’s next? Bringing back Denisovans?
Love this!
It wouldn't be impossible to backbreed dinosaurs. Birds already contain the genes necessary to produce a tail, fingers, and teeth, and you can also deactivate the gene for beak formation.
The only thing this would do is create an aberration that looks neither like a bird nor like a dinosaur. It is pointless and unethical.
The only thing this would do is create an aberration that doesn't look like a bird or a dinosaur. It is pointless and unethical.
@1Anime4you Even if were possible, it would possibly take multiple generations. There are ongoing efforts to backbreed for the Auroch and Quagga from Cows and Zebras that are still not quite there yet.
Colossal said in a comment thread of one of their videos that they won't bring back the dinosaurs.
@@sffb8295 So? We're speaking theoretically here. And as I said, scientists have already been successful in reactovating the tooth gene in birds, so it's far from a long shot.
Cool thanks as long as it’s done with wisdom
it would be really nice if they could vision reject just one extinct species it seems like there is talk about it, but never seen it yet. Hopefully they can.
cheetahs about to get a huge buff
I BELIEVE IN Y'ALL 🥺
Me: so this is how you bring back mammoths
Alan: no... this is how you play God
But woolly mammoths, for example, when extinct mostly because of climate and environmental change. How will re-creating something similar be constructive?
problem with the Dodo is that it only produced 1 egg at a time and was supposedly not a tasty bird and would not fare well in a country with predators.
Hey Beth the ecologist!!!
All your fancy body movements, giggling aside, let's ponder and talk
Being an ecologist myself, okay, with the current extinction rates due to anthropogenic means, is deextinction really required? We are already struggling with the species that we have in several degrading ecosystems.
With current and frequent habitat changes, do you really think substantial and stable habitat is available for WM, DD and Thylacine? Aside the dodo and Thylacine, the paleo climate of the mammoth is considerably different from the current( given the rapid changes)
With the extent of global warming, pollution, habitat loss, invasives and such, could the mammoth withstand such behemoth changes
Mammoth!mammoth! mammoth!!!! Behold the joy of Asagoth, the poacher. How do you intend to address this?
As far as I’m concerned as a observer, that’s been educating myself with the videos, old and new; the larger context we should all be concerned about is the health of the entire ecosystem and how the plants and animals interact in continuity with their natural history.
In terms of the woolly mammoth, there is an admittedly dated TED talk video I’ve been listening to, that argues that the woolly mammoth was quite adaptable, (or plastic as described in the video), during it’s time on earth. It migrated across the Bering land bridge, Eurasia, and North America during a number of glacial peaks, and survived on a few islands until they didn’t during the dawn of modern civilization.
After briefly volunteering in Wolf conservation and exploring a new career path with the savory Institute, that also argues for the larger ecological context when it comes to agriculture and desertification; my views on the larger ecological context we’re affirmed in the process. For poaching, there is very much the possible need to enforce and update current endangered species policy, let alone have the breeders take cues from standard conservation that have helped endangered species rebound to a large degree with the newer tools available as suggested.
@@rypatmackrock looking and educating with videos is one aspect. In the first place, the viability of the animals is questionable. The plasticity of mammoths in the past cannot be equated with that of the present.
Remember endangered animals who are still out there are different from extinct animals and cannot even be compared for initiating the deextinction process.
You are no expert in the field and what ever you are talking about are those borrowed from movie dialogues and the videos. So I would urge you to stop acting like a scientist. Volunteering bla bla bla reaches nowhere near to actual researching.
I would also urge people to Not copy paste the ideas and findings of actual researchers and resonate them as their own
One can always have their views and express, which I agree, but not in every thing. These days information is exposed cheaply in the name of “internet” and every one ( public) starts acting funnily. This is the curse of modern day innovation.
Finally, you don’t and any body for that matter ride high with a couple of small betterments achieved in the process and act as though “ every thing is possible and feasible”
Let’s assume for a moment, Even if the mammoth after de extinction, did survive in certain pockets, man does not have the habit of being quiet thereafter. A mammoth initiative in the name of mammoth tourism and what not would emerge. It’s all “ money matters” at the end of the day
Man is too weird and you must expect the least normal from him
@@IndoBrown I tried to answer as humbly, and as optimistically as possible, and your voice has been heard. Thanks for your time.
The day they clone the Dodo is the day I can die
We need male and female mammoth to make a generation
That kinda seems like a elephant matrix pod
I want to see a living mamath! Do it!
i',m glad we won;t have to do a real life Jurassic park, but its a shame we won;t see what the dinosaurs really looked like
As much as I wish we could revive non avian dinosaurs, they would have no natural ecosystem and not be able to exist without damage to existing ecosystems as well as the fact that I do not believe humans deserve the animals they have already
Well they are developing a chickensaurous then actual dinosaurs with enough funding if the rapture hasn’t happpened by then
@dungeonsanddragonsbutformo9835 They are also simply too big and would likely not be able to breath in modern atmosphere. Something like the T-rex would also get itself killed of exhaustion or hunger due to how many times they would need to hunt per day to sustain themselves.
Yes a single cross bred woolly mammoth x elephant will be concocted in a lab then of course live out a "happy life" alone with a life of experimentation 🤷♂️
How about a African Lion with American Cave Lion characteristics.
Dodo 🥺❤
Fantastic Speaker! Muted, she surges forward and just jumps in. Her body language conveys excitement, intelligence, and confidence.
I think some nerves show as she shifts her weight from leg to leg. But she may just be used to talking from behind a podium.
Yes, this technology can be use to benefit many. However, this same technology can be used in bad way to bring about unbelievable unanticipated harm to millions. Think about the military applications of such a thing. Man is on this inevitable trajectory time will reveal what happen in reality.
This is really cool and all, but shouldn't first we focus on the species going extinct right now? Perhaps all those extinct Pleistocene animals should remain extinct as a reminder for us to take care of what we have now?
They are soo there not talked about for it but they are working on using gene editing to help genetic diversity soo a few animals will be like blue spix macaw well known for alot of inbreeding and colossal is finna help with that
@respecteverybodynohate9637 Could it also lead to the technology being used to save animals in similar situations such as the Baiji, Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, Vaquita, and Yangtze Giant Softshell Turtle?
She is more convincing than Elizabeth Holmes
And you are neither convincing than her nor Elizabeth Holmes
It would be great to see an extinct species and see how it returns from its extinction.
Where are the goddam mammoths ? We've been waiting for ages
They had a recent post on Instagram suggesting 2028
The goddamn mammoth is afraid of the goddamn you
Jurassic world
The future is now thanks to science! And thanks to science, wooly mammoths, dodos and other extinct species can once again walk the planet.
But be careful. As Malcolm would say, “But your scientists were so preoccupied with whetherr or not they could, they didn’t stop to think whether they should.”
Don't be fooled - they aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. The reality is that the genes they will be introducing are guestimations from their comparative analyses between the Asian elephant and the mammoth - in any case, they will be constructing the genes completely artificially using the nucleotide sequences derived from what little remains of recovered mammoth DNA.
This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
Can't wait to go Dodo hunting with my bros
Putting non-native or inconsequential extinct species back into the world might be the dumbest thing I have heard of doing.
Bring back the tazzy tiger! We want them as dogs in the US Lol
Not pets.
@ pretty sure wed be able to domesticate them just like we did dogs
Question: Since we are losing species at an alarming rate, how does replenishing them at a snail's pace help?
Science takes time, and while we work on it, we're also saving species today through our Colossal Foundation and conservation efforts. Check it out here colossalfoundation.org/
Sacre Bleu! Will you also be cloning Napoleons? Neanderthals? We are in Thursday Next.
Try black rhinos
Your creating mammonthized elephant not a mammoth
Sure..humans are so wise and put aside their differences to work together all the time so why wouldn't something this complex and difficult with no forseable profit involved in it, work like magic ?
They key is to market it in such a way to attract investors. They aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
Like catching a reusable rocket, bringing back the Dido would be the next "giant leap for mankind" #ElonMuskPleaseFundThis
There’s a lot more other species that would be way easier to bring back. Not just these charismatic attention grabbing species
❤
Can’t wait to take my son mammoth hunting the way our ancestors did!
😂
Can't wait to take my son Neanderthal hunting (no offense) the way our ancestors did!
I hate dinosaurs cant be deinstinct
98% of dna is less than us and bonobo... :/
So wait . . . you want to cancel Darwin's Theory of Natural Selection? I don't think that's a good idea.
❤🦣
I just wanna eat the mammoth lol
Hmm thats very smart to see dinosaur dna things well for sure if we use dna of monitor lizard or reptile dna and use gecko freeker necked lizard and bearded lizard and use frog dna mixing them all together you might get for chance an new reptile that i might call as AO-reptile they are hybrids so hybrids so as we made 7 hybrids of animals made by greedy zookeepers of zoos we have zonkeys tigons ligers and any others that helps us to identify about finding the new species of animals that will change their species into new which lets them to survive during future but we cannot ever do these to ourselves as were higher intelligent primates known to exist we invented everything
I see no evidence to have confgidence in this project or this woman. These three creatures would make no difference to anything. Still cool if it could be done. is there any progress to justify these people getting paid? How long before something happens? its this a humbug? if its that easyt why not save so many numbers of creatures close to exctinction/ they don't do that.
If you watch the whole video, she explained several ways that they are trying to help animals that are close to extinction.
Well, the thing is, they aren't de-extincting the mammoth, they're making a chimera. They are editing the fuck out of the Asian elephant genome and plugging in a few genes from the mammoth in hopes of expressing enlarged tusks, some thicker hair, or something that might trick the public into at least thinking it's some sort of hybrid. The reality is that the genes they will be introducing are guestimations from their comparative analyses between the Asian elephant and the mammoth - in any case, they will be constructing the genes completely artificially using the nucleotide sequences derived from what little remains of recovered mammoth DNA.
This company will attract initial investment from this folly, but they're just going to use the elephant - mammoth endeavor as a proving ground for public support. Their next 'evolutionary' step will be to pivot from these de-extinction experiments to human genome editing. The entire plan is laid out in this video.
Then you didn’t listen or watch the video she actually explains things
What about preventing language from undergoing extinction? The way you pronounce "species" is abominable.
But woolly mammoths, for example, when extinct mostly because of climate and environmental change. How will re-creating something similar be constructive?
They almost certainly were driven to extinction by homo sapiens. There have been interglacial periods before, none have had anything like the rate of megafaunal extinction as the current one. Even the evidence from Wrangel island is now suggesting the mammoth population was stable until humans turned up.