Could we one day expect to see dinosaurs, mammoths or aurochs resurface to roam the Earth? That's what some scientists from the University of Melbourne could now envisage
Australian scientists recently received funding for an important project: reviving the Tasmanian tiger, an animal species officially considered extinct since 1982. And this is not the first such experiment being carried out around the world.
Could we one day expect to see dinosaurs, mammoths or aurochs resurface to roam the Earth? That's what some scientists could now envisage. For example, a laboratory based at the University of Melbourne in Australia will soon see the light of day, thanks to a $5 million philanthropic gift, where a team of scientists will be focusing their efforts on reviving the Tasmanian tiger.
Although this species disappeared from most of the world more than 200 years ago, it managed to survive until 1936 (when the last-known Tasmanian tiger died) in the island state of Australia. This is why scientists from the University of Melbourne are putting their hopes on this specific species.
Drawing on biotechnology principles, their field of study consists in sequencing the genome of the "Thylacinus cynocephalus," the scientific name of the Tasmanian tiger. The genome of the Tasmanian tiger was sequenced from a juvenile specimen held in the collections of Museums Victoria and combined with other marsupial species native to Australia.
Funding for this project will be used to further the understanding of the thylacine genome, develop techniques to use marsupial stem cells to conceive an embryo, and then transfer the embryo into a host womb, such as a marsupial mouse or Tasmanian devil. The technique is complex and uncertain, and it will probably take a decade before the researchers achieve their goals.