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Suggested Predictions
Ziibos (14)
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It is heart-broken for losing your beloved pets. Unfortunately, cats and dogs have much shorter lives than we have. As dog lovers, we may experience their death several time in our life time.
In May 2008, a US biotech company announced it will auction off the right for five dog owners to have their furry best friend cloned, with bidding starting at 100,000 dollars. "The average dog owner has a different relationship with his dog than the average cat owner," Hawthorne, the CEO of BioArts said. "The level of intensity on the dog side just dwarfed what we saw on the cat side." BioArts said in a statement it has been granted the sole license for cloning dogs, cats and endangered species using patented processes developed for the cloning of Dolly the sheep, the first successfully cloned animal. Will pets cloning become a commercial trend in the near future?
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Also, my family have avoided getting look-alike dogs when they pass on, to avoid emotional confusion. So far my family has had during my life: 1 black/white wiry terrier; 1 all black "heinz-variety"; 1 fox terrier; 1 blue-heeler cross. Each dog is it's own unique personality, and each dog has been brought into the family for what it can bring, not in memory of it's predecessors.
So here are the options:
a) Don't get a new dog/cat. Very rare for anyone who has had a dog/cat to never get a new one, especially if they had a long-term pet as a child. Some people may "say" they'd never get a pet again, but either they get seduced by puppy eyes, or adopted by a stray cat. My late grandfather is a prime example of this. When his dog died (age 17yrs) "I'm to old to have a pet." he ended up getting adopted by stray cats ... twice. No opportunity for cloners to profit here, as pet-buying is often a spontaneous decision when it occurs, and non-pet buying is a response to the actual loss of the pet, rather than the absence of said pet.
b) Get a new pet, but one that is different from it's predecessors. Again, no opportunity for a cloning company to make a buck here. Most of the people with mutts or moggys would fit into this cat-egory. (Sorry, couldn't resist.)
c) Get a new pet that looks like it's predecessors. Most pet owners know that even a clone won't actually be like it's originator, so if it's appearance you're after, why not go for a dog that is close and moderately inexpensive. I suspect this is where most of the sales of pure-breeds comes from.
d) Get a clone. Expensive, potentially riddled with DNA defects, and still not the originator dog. As cost goes down, some people will probably feel the emotional need to do this, but I bet most of them end up disappointed.
"Many people consider pets to be part of our families," Marcy Darnovsky, associate director of the Oakland-based Center for Genetics and Society, said in a statement. "If we get used to cute cloned puppies, will some people expect cute cloned babies next?"
However, it will become a commercial trend in the developed countries where people take pets as own children.