Rolfe
Adult human female
This is a much more relevant point, and one which I've been pondering on since I read some more detailed articles. No, the mortality seems too high to me. I think you'd have trouble finding a breeder who admitted to such high losses.Barbrae said:Rolfe, the article states that cloned cats have a mortality rate of 15-45 % 30 days after birth. That seems like an awfully big margin 15-45. But it also says that uncloned cats have the same rate - is this correct?
I'm also rather concerned about the welfare of the surrogate mothers. I was assuming that US animal welfare and experimentation laws would take care of that, but on more sober reflection, I'm maybe not so sure.
However, my main question relates to duplicates. How many embryos do they start off? More than one at a time, I'll bet. Like IVF - they implant several embryos in the hope that at least one will "take". And look at the rate of multiple births that come out of that method.
If you end up with precisely one successful live kitten, well, OK maybe. But what if you actually get two? Or three? And I can't see that's impossible, in fact I think it's quite likely. Do you quietly rehome them to your mates, or slip them to the local rescue cattery or what?
I was just thinking, if I really had the tissue stored (which I haven't), and Rolfe hadn't been FIV-positive (which he was, and which I suspect would be a total no-no to cloning), and I had the money, what would I want to know? For a start, I'd want to know that the surrogate mothers lived a life of feline luxury, and that if more than one Rolfie-clone resulted, I'd get the lot at no extra charge.
Yes, the one-to-one relationship I had with that cat was very special, but I'd far rather have several of him than know (or fear) that my pampered pet's clone-brother was in an orphanage somewhere. Or even put down as surplus to requirements.
I wonder if these questions have been asked, and if so, were the answers satisfactory? Criticising the "waste" of £27,000 is a complete side-track to the real issues.
Rolfe.