Abstract
The concept of clone-family testing is compared with existing progeny testing
systems. The critical factors that will decide how cloning is utilized are the
potential size of cloned families, and the cost per embryo (or per calf born).
If family sizes of 100 000 become routinely achievable (cheaply), then clone
testing becomes viable. In rough figures, cloned embryos costing $30
with a 50% calving rate would be attractive to farmers and would be
cheap enough that farmers would buy more (crossbred) embryos in order to breed
further replacement cows. At $300 per embryo, farmers would be more
inclined to buy a number of cloned pure-bred female embryos and then to use
conventional artificial insemination to breed further replacements from these
superior cows. At $3000 per embryo, farmers would probably only be
interested in very small numbers of cloned animals, most of which would be
males. The relative importance of adult versus fetal cloning is discussed. The
need for gene banks to preserve genetic variation is emphasized; both gametes
and somatic tissue cultures should be considered.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
9 articles.
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