a huge breakthrough in RNA could see the Tasmanian tiger walk the Earth
again!
'it is an extinct carnivorous marsupial that
was native to the Australian mainland and the islands
of Tasmania and New Guinea.
The thylacine died out on New Guinea and mainland Australia around 3,600-3,200
years ago, prior to the arrival of Europeans, possibly because of the
introduction of the dingo, whose earliest record dates to around the same time, but
which never reached Tasmania. Prior to European settlement, around 5,000
remained in the wild on Tasmania. Beginning in the nineteenth century, they
were perceived as a threat to the livestock of farmers and bounty
hunting was introduced. The last known of its species died in 1936
at Hobart
Zoo in Tasmania. The thylacine is widespread in popular culture and is
a cultural icon in Australia'
photograph By Baker; E.J. Keller. - Report of the Smithsonian Institution 1904, from the Smithsonian Institution archives, secondly what is RNA? it is genetic material present in all living cells that has structural similarities to DNA but now RNA has been recovered from the desiccated skin and muscle of a Tasmanian tiger stored since 1891 at a museum in Sweden, but RNA sequencing, unlike DNA, provides experts with real biology and metabolism regulation that was happening in the cells and tissues of the Tasmanian tigers before they went extinct, which would be necessary to de-extinct the species, so will the Tasmanian tiger roam wild and free again? I really do not know, but I would like to think so, for the full story have a look here.
No comments:
Post a Comment