A lot of research is not cost-effective initially. A few nuggets tend to cover the losses of many failed research projects.
No doubt someone will drive hybrid-genetic research forward, whatever the cost. I recall a S. Korean professor who first cloned a sheep, to mixed acclaim and disapproval.
Originally posted by moonbus A lot of research is not cost-effective initially. A few nuggets tend to cover the losses of many failed research projects.
No doubt someone will drive hybrid-genetic research forward, whatever the cost. I recall a S. Korean professor who first cloned a sheep, to mixed acclaim and disapproval.
Dolly the sheep was cloned 20 years ago. But other than a handful of research projects, the technology has progressed very slowly. I don't know a lot about about it, but I think they are currently some small-scale efforts to clone cattle commercially, and some efforts to clone large numbers of cattle but, again, it's been 20 years and the cost is still sky high.