Chromosones
No. Dolly was the first cloned sheep, not cow.
The second animal to be cloned after Dolly the sheep was a cow in Japan. In 1998 the twin calves were born cloned from a donor cow. The Japanese scientist were looking into cloning to improve their cattle stains.
This is a false statement. Dolly was the name of the first animal cloned, however, she was a domestic sheep and not a cow. She was cloned on July 5 1996.
The chromosome makeup of Dolly is identical to that of sheep A
Dolly died from complications related to a lung infection. There was some controversy regarding Dolly's birth and death, particularly revolving around the suggestion that Dolly was subject to premature ageing, as the cell from which she was cloned was taken from a 6 year old sheep.
it was said that dolly the sheep was cloned in a farm
Dolly and the sheep from which she was cloned have identical genes.
Dolly was cloned in 1996 and was the first cloned mammal. Dolly died in 2003 at the age of six.
Dolly the sheep needed a surrogate mother because she was cloned from an adult sheep. Her biological mother would not recognize Dolly as her own.
No. Dolly was the first cloned sheep, not cow.
dolly.......
Dolly was a sheep that was cloned.
The first cloned placental mammal was Dolly the Sheep. She was named after the ample chested singer dolly parton because the DNA for her egg was taken from a mammary cell of the cloned animal.
Dolly the sheep is a famous example - Scientists in Scotland cloned a ewe by inserting DNA from a single sheep cell into an egg and implanted it in a surrogate mother
As Dolly the cloned sheep had a reduced lifespan the answer is NO
Dolly was a sheep that was cloned.
Dolly the Sheep was named after Dolly Parton because the cell that was taken from the sheep to clone Dolly the sheep was a mamary gland cell, since Dolly Parton is known for her boobs Dolly was the natural choice.