Yes, Dolly the sheep was the first mammal to be cloned. See Sources and Related Links for more information.
Of Course not
I've been in many evolution vs creation debates, and there is one arguments that there is no creationist response to. Q: How do unrelated animals have the same ERVs in the same positions of the DNA? ERVs are inserted randomly into the DNA, the only way two animals could have the same ERVs is if they are related.
Yes, both plants and animals have DNA as their genetic material. DNA carries the genetic instructions that determine the traits and functions of living organisms. While there may be variations in the specific sequences and structures of DNA between plants and animals, the fundamental genetic material is the same.
no and yes. you cant breed animals simply from dna collected from a saliva or hair sample. how ever and ovum (egg cell) and sperm cell without dna would not have a reaction. you need two sex cells from animals of opposite genders if the same species and the cells have to have undergone mitosis (you cant merely put dna from any part of the body into these cells and expect anything to work they need to go through a process which involves reconfiguration of the individuals dna chromosomes for the cells to be viable)
Because they are both living things
It's possible by mixing the genes or DNA with other animals to create more advanced and technical animals (Pokemon).
No. They don't have the same DNA.
They have the same nucleotides (A, T, C, G) and structure (double helix and chromosomes), and have a lot of the same genes, but a lot of genes differ, also.
no animals and plant cells can not have the same genes.
A DNA fingerprint is really all the genes that are found in in your chromosomes. No two are ever alike except for identical twins (or triplets).
No; nearly all organisms use the same 4 nucleotide bases in DNA (RNA uses Uracil instead of Thymine in DNA). I believe there is a single species of bacteria that uses a different base, but other than that, every single living being uses the same 4 DNA bases: Adenine, Cytosine, Guanine, and Thymine. What differs is their specific sequence.
They get it from the same place that animals like us do, the genes in their chromosomes found in the DNA.