“Why i want to clone my dog.”
I want to clone my dog pappy because he was the best dog i ever got! Pappy was a smart cute dog that i grow up with ever since i was a kid . My dog Pappy was a Border Collie. Border Collie’s are known to be very smart! It seemed like Pappy could read my mind! First of all, Pappy passed away October of 2014. If possible, i would have cloned Pappy because he was the only best friend i ever loved. Pappy was a little small dog when my mom got him from a white old man across the street; every morning pappy would wake me up to go to school or when is summer me and pappy would just sleep as long as we want. Secondly, i want to clone pappy because i want have a lot of fun with pappy again. I love to take pappy
Technology is making it easier and more accessible to clone animals, especially typical pets living in normal households. The process of cloning is explained in the article “Should You Clone Your Pet” in the section “Science Fiction.” Scientists are now using genetics to make embryos, which are a cluster of cells. The embryo is then implanted in the female dog’s womb. Hopefully it would grow just as it would in a normal pregnancy. Eventually, the dog would give birth to the cloned animal. But is it really easier as it seems to clone a deceased pet instead of just getting a new one?
I want to clone my dog gema because she was the best dog I had .When I throw the ball to her she will go it get in run away then I need to chase her to get the ball away for her. When I feel sad she will be there and make me happy. I don’t have nothing to do i always go play with her.
and more advances to the cloning technology are being made. In 2005, a group of South Korean scientists shared the first dog to be cloned (“Man’s Best Friend Cloned”). Ever since Dolly surfaced in the scientific community, scientists have been trying new techniques. Dolly was the cause of breakthrough and also the cause of much more.
Scientists are predicting that within the decade we should be able to clone domestic pets, affordably. If you would like to be able to clone your present pet when this technology does become available, all you have to do is what is known as cryopreservation. Cryopreservation is when you take a small skin ample from your pet, have it frozen and stored until you can clone your pet. This cloning can be done long after the death of your pet, so essentially, you could have the exact same appearance of a dog for your entire life. You may be asking where you can get this procedure done and how much it costs? The procedure itself runs around 700 dollars, plus the veterinarian fees and a 10-dollar per month storage fee. There
Scientist haven’t successfully cloned a human. What sense does it make, to waste money and time on something that isn’t going to be cloned. Yes, most animals are successfully cloned but why clone if you aren’t getting what you want out of it. In the article “Here Kitty-Kitty-Kitty” Magnus says “The people who want this are spending huge sums of money to get their pet immortalized or to guarantee they’re getting
Would you risk so many problems to have another pet identical to the one you already have or already had? There are so many pets in the world, why would we clone to make more? Things could wrong with cloning and it would be weird. For instance, I don’t understand why people would clone their dog, Sally, to help with grief. When they are grieving because Sally died. That would be weird most of the time.
Why clone? That's the question many breeders are asking. For breeding stock cloning could increase amounts of offspring. A clone could manage a breeding career from a horse so it could continue to show.Cloning could bring back beloved childhood horses or past champions. But is it worth the cost of $160,000? (Bell Clone Age)
I think cloning a deceased pet is a terrible idea because, it seems extremely disrespectful. To me it seems like you’re replacing your pet, and if you don’t mind replacing a pet with a genetic copy the original pet must not have met that much to you. If a beloved family member died would you create a copy of them? I know I wouldn’t. How would you feel if one day you die and are immediately replaced by a genetic copy of yourself. Doesn't that take away from who you are? Every human on earth is different from each other and creating an exact replica of any living thing makes it less like a living creature and more like something that can be mass produced in a factory. Everyone is special and I think cloning takes away from that. Another reason I’m against cloning recreationally (cloning for your enjoyment not to cure diseases and sniff out bombs and such) is if you have a younger child that’s dog dies and you decide to clone it, doesn’t that take away the perpetuity of death for this child? If someone close to this child dies and they think they can just replace them than the shock of that being untrue will be much worst than their grief over a deceased dog. To conclude my complicated opinion, when something/someone is dead leave it to rest! Horror movies have taught that messing with others lives (or deaths) only ends bad for you.
I Want to clone my dog because he is getting old and dying.He is a great dog he like to play a lot and run around. His breed is french bulldog he is a very go dog we got him for free me and my family. We got him from a woman she said she can not take care of him anymore,she did not have any money to take care of the dog
In the summer of 1996, an animal unlike any other was born unto the world. Roughly three feet high and covered in an insulating material, there were countless others that looked nearly identical freely roaming the countryside. But this animal was special; it was precisely identical to one of its brethren. Dolly the sheep was the first ever manmade clone, an exact copy of its genetic donor. In the fifteen years since the birth of Dolly cloning technology has been improving at a steady pace, and now humanity as a whole is at an impasse: human clones. Scientists are very close to being able to clone a human being, but should they? A ban on human cloning issued by the World Health Organization is in place (World Health Organization 1) but it
Once we can master the science of cloning, this would be a great asset to our world.
If scientist continue cloning, the side effects can cause early deaths. People will want their cloned pet to live as long as possible, but the clone will most likely live up to half of their lifespan. “The majority of (male) mice cloned died after approximately 500 days, which was around 50% of the lifespan in control mice” (Wells, Pg. 225). The owner of the pet will have less time
Over three years ago a man named Dr. Phillip Dupont decided to clone his doberman-catahoula mix dog. He loved his dogs and he was turning 70 years old so he decided to spend his money to get his dog, Melvin, cloned. “He paid the Sooam Biotech Research Foundation in South Korea more than $100,000 to create a copy of Melvin,” (Landman). He created two clones of his dog, Ken and Harvey. It is not as unpopular as you think, “Sooam says it’s produced about 80 dogs for Americans since 2007,” (Landman). They state it costs $50,000 for puppies and $25,000 for kittens. Cloning is not only for endangered species but also for people who just love their
Is cloning your pets the next big thing? Cloning is a process that that takes thousands of dollars to do. Cloning can also be a risk for the animal that your cloning . Something can go wrong and your pet can be something that you don't want. Cloning is wrong to do in many ways.
People have been trying to clone for years, but it never really works. Cloning is not good for multiple reasons one of the main reasons is the treatment for cloning is fairly expensive. Another main reason is that it is very rare for cloning to actually work and if it does work the clone will most likely not live that long because when you clone something you are telling its nucleus that it is young again. When really it is not, and that is why people don't clone because it takes many attempts to work, and that's if it ever does work.