Plants have been cloned for thousands of years, specifically some varieties of grapes in Europe. More recently viruses, bacteria and other microorganisms, worms & insects, tadpoles & frogs, fish (carp), mice & rats, rabbits, ferret (Libby & Lilly), domestic cats (Copy Cat and Little Nicky), dogs, wolves, goats, mouflon (wild sheep), domestic sheep (Dolly), camel, an extinct Pyrenean Ibex in 2009 for seven minutes, pigs, deer (Dewey), cows (thirteen of them), Indian bison, mule (Idaho Gem, Utah Pioneer, and Idaho Star), horses (five of them), African wild cat, rhesus monkey.
cloned organisms
In 1952, leopard frogs were successfully cloned. The first cloned mammal was Dolly (a sheep) in 1996, followed by a cloned mule and a horse, Prometea, in 2003. In 2007, a lab in the Philippines announced a cloned water buffalo.
The only way a human has been cloned is if the government has done it secretly or the gov. doesn't know about it. Other than that no a human has not 'yet' been cloned. But they have sucsessfully cloned a sheep.
Can identical twins have babies? Yes. A cloned animal, except for its age, is indistinguishable from an identical twin. Depending upon how it was cloned, the telomeres of its DNA may be shortened, but this would have little impact on its ability to breed. In short, yes, cloned animals may have babies, and live out their lives as naturally as uncloned organisms, and this has been demonstrated in numerous cloned species.
Yes, there have been documented cases of health issues in cloned animals, such as higher rates of birth defects, genetic abnormalities, and shortened lifespan compared to non-cloned animals. These issues can arise due to errors in the cloning process and genetic abnormalities that occur during the cloning procedure.
A Quagga cannot be cloned because there are not any living animals in its species. The technology has not been invented yet for something to be cloned from DNA after it is extinct.
animals have been succesfully cloned. if you watch animal planet alot you would know. NO OFFENSE animals have been succesfully cloned. if you watch animal planet alot you would know. NO OFFENSE
Cloning can be used in various organisms, including plants, animals, and even microbes. Commonly cloned organisms include sheep (like Dolly the sheep), cows, pigs, and various plant species for agricultural purposes. Microorganisms such as bacteria are also commonly cloned for research and industrial applications.
No humans have been documented to have been cloned-so no.
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of course not
A dog has been cloned it is a pitbull of a woman. and it was the first to be done. look it up, i think it was cloned five times