Photo: Fun With Frozen Ferrets
Elizabeth Ann, a black-footed ferret, was cloned from cells of another ferret that were cryopreserved at the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance's Frozen Zoo.

The ridiculously cute Elizabeth Ann made her debut in February as the first cloned black-footed ferret. She is the genetic twin of Willa, one of the last 18 wild ferrets captured in the 1980s for a captive breeding program overseen by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). Willa never produced offspring, but after she died in 1988, her cells were cryopreserved at the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance's Frozen Zoo.
As a result of the USFWS's regular breeding program, nearly 300 black-footed ferrets now live in the wild. But all of those ferrets are dangerously inbred, since they are descended from just seven individuals. A genomic study revealed that Willa's genome possessed three times more unique variations than the wild population.
Back in 2013, the USFWS contacted the nonprofit Revive & Restore about trying to clone endangered ferrets. Revive & Restore, which promotes the use of modern biotechnologies to advance wildlife conservation (see this month's interview on page 46), agreed to spearhead that project. (The group also was instrumental in the successful cloning from frozen cells of the similarly imperiled Mongolian Przewalski's horse, and it is working to bring back extinct woolly mammoths.) ViaGen, a company that clones pet dogs, cats, and horses, employed a domestic ferret as Elizabeth Ann's gestational mother.
As the first cloned endangered species native to North America, Elizabeth Ann offers hope for successfully restoring her species to the western prairies and mountains of the United States. Revive & Restore aims to further increase the species' genetic diversity by cloning the frozen cells of a male ferret that died in 1985.
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I'm sure that someone will be calling ferret cloning an existential crisis shortly. I just can't figure out why.
We will all have to wear masks and get vaccines to protect from the ferret variants.
Actually they are vaccinating ferrets for Covid. It is one of the animals that can catch it and spread it back to humans so vets are recommending vaccination for pet ferrets.
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I hope they have more genetic popsicles on hand because expanding the gene pool from seven to nine while a large percentage increase doesn't sound like much of an improvement. How big does a localized pool need to be for inbreeding to be a non-issue?
160.
At least that's what scientists calculated would be needed for a multi-generational colonizing spaceship.
The name of the next cloned Ferret will be: Seven of Nine.
Prepare to be assimilated into our collective.
Resistance is futile.
So now we can do a trial run on populating the cosmos with frozen human embryos. Send a bunch of frozen ferret babies to Mars. What could possible go wrong?
They return in a thousand years and take over the planet.
Trying to repopulate an extinct species is an example of hubris and foolishness.
Whether it was from their failure to adapt to a changing niche or growth of predators or reduction of their food sources, species go extinct for good reasons. Ignoring nature in counter to the divine order always has unintended consequences.
Who cares?
Cloning hubristic fools is covered by the Bill of Rights as surely as citizens bearing arms or politicians bearing children.
It should be noted however that :
1. Some states prohibit the posession of ferrets and stoats.
2. Some stoats are more active in science policy than others:
http://mustelid.blogspot.com
Which is the most dangerous: citizens bearing arms or politicians bearing children?
Hey Hunter....whacha doin'?
It was a combination of a disease and decrease in population of prairie dogs they feed on.
"Life...uh...finds a way."
I saw a movie about that. I didn't end well.
Why would cloning even be possible if it were un-natural or contrary to a supposedly "divine" order of things?
You're assuming a presence of a natural and divine plan not found in evidence.
Is the right to own ferrets the right to clone gods?
A right to own ferrets would logically include the right to clone ferrets, but God does not exist. *Tips fedora* M'Lady.
Whether it was from their failure to adapt to a changing niche or growth of predators or reduction of their food sources, species go extinct for good reasons. Ignoring nature in counter to the divine order always has unintended consequences.( https://wapexclusive.com/ )
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Divine order?
Then God said, "Let us make mankind in our image, in our likeness, so that they may rule over the fish in the sea and the birds in the sky, over the livestock and all the wild animals, and over all the creatures that move along the ground."
Genesis 1:26
See what I said above before "cloning" somebody else's post.
Next up: cloning Joe Biden.
Too bad they couldn't clone George Carlin.
Fo shizzle, Dizzle.
Now enough about Richard Gere...