国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

The ethics and business of cloning

(China Daily) Updated: 2015-12-04 07:52

The ethics and business of cloning

Editor's note: China's Boya Biotech has announced that it will join hands with Sooam Biotech of the Republic of Korea to build the largest cloning facility in Tianjin. Their goal is to "produce" 1million cloned oxen every year, plus dogs and even some endangered species. According to some recent reports, Boya Biotech board chairman has said the company is "improving" the primate-cloning technology but it will not clone humans in deference to public sentiment. The opinions of two science writers on the subject follow:

Ethical concerns over cloned animals

Unlike natural reproduction, in which the newborn has the genes of both parents and thus can be different from both, cloned animals get their genes from only one and are therefore rather vulnerable.

Dolly the sheep, the first cloned animal, was born in Scotland in 1996. Sixteen years later, the Nobel Prize for Medicine was awarded to John B. Gurdon and Shinya Yamanaka for proving that specialized cells, too, can be reprogrammed to become any kind of tissue for the body.

Cloning can help produce more animal products to meet market demands. Animal products here mean more than food and fur. Some cloned animals can produce trans-genetic products, like certain kinds of protein that can be used as medicine. Cloning can also save some endangered species from extinction. And for some people rich enough to afford it, cloning can "gift" them "copies" of their beloved dead pets.

The first pet was cloned in the Republic of Korea back in 2008. But all attempts to commercialize animal cloning in China have failed, perhaps because cloned animals tend to die rather young.

Also, since there is no evidence either to verify or to falsify the safety claims of food products made from cloned animals, wide-spread concern over their safety is understandable.

The cloning of pets too has come in for criticism, especially on animal welfare grounds. One cloned pet dog can "consume" about 80 other dogs because only one in scores of cloned embryos is likely to survive, and the female dogs carrying the "failed" embryos will abort, which could prove fatal for some of them. Hence, cloning is not only expensive but also raises ethical concerns.

The UK Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has long been accusing those cloning pet animals of cruelty. And in September, the European Parliament passed a bill banning the cloning of cattle or selling of cloned cattle meat, because cloned animals are more prone to health problems. Will the cloning facility in Tianjin face the same problem? We have to wait for the answer.

Zhang Tiankan is deputy editor-in-chief of Encyclopedic Knowledge and a former research scholar at the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

...
林州市| 甘肃省| 襄樊市| 樟树市| 宿松县| 岫岩| 江油市| 林州市| 卢龙县| 仁化县| 文水县| 巴南区| 和龙市| 绵竹市| 运城市| 鲁山县| 伊吾县| 柘城县| 林周县| 抚州市| 万源市| 台南县| 广德县| 简阳市| 玛纳斯县| 安溪县| 林芝县| 承德县| 吉水县| 柳州市| 林芝县| 温泉县| 九江市| 平江县| 云阳县| 景东| 桦甸市| 古田县| 濮阳县| 乐陵市| 全州县|