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To: BWAC who wrote (48336)5/29/2003 3:31:04 PM
From: Nemer  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 53068
 
never say never ...

Larry has a new cousin ..... from Idaho and he said he'd never .....

as you can see from the two distinct articles I've posted to you in the past few minutes, my reading tastes are disparate ...

that is disparate, Lar, not desperate LOL

LOL

>>>>May 29, 2003 02:48 PM

From bloodhorse.com:

Mule is First Member of Horse Family to be
Cloned

A healthy and energetic mule named Idaho Gem
is the first member of the horse family to be
cloned, joining the barnyard of cloned animals
that now includes sheep, cows, pigs, cats and
rodents.

Researchers at the University of Idaho cloned the
mule using a cell from a mule fetus and an egg
from a horse. Idaho Gem is the genetic brother of
Taz, a champion racing mule, and the
researchers said the clone mules also will be
trained to race.

The cloning was particularly unusual because
mules -- the hybrid from a donkey and a horse --
are almost without exception sterile and unable to
produce their own young.

"A mule can't do it himself, so we thought we
would give it a hand," said Gordon L. Woods of
the University of Idaho, the leader of the mule
cloning team.

Now, said Woods, he plans to use the same
techniques that worked on Idaho Gem to clone
horses.

"We think the same sort of advances that we had
to make to produce this cloned mule are important
for cloning horses," said Woods. He is first author
of a report appearing today in the journal Science.

Other researchers, however, said they expect the
birth this summer of cloned horses produced by
techniques slightly different from that used by the
Idaho team.

Mules are bred by mating a male donkey with a
female horse. The breeding success is about the
same as among horses alone. Mating a male
horse with a female donkey produces an animal
called a hinnie. Both mules and hinnies can be
either male or female, but they are almost
invariably sterile.

Taz, Idaho Gem's brother, is a champion on the
mule racing circuit in California and Nevada. Taz
has gained fame in showdown races with another
mule, Black Ruby, who has dominated the circuit.

To clone the racing mule's brother, researchers
bred Taz's parents, a jack donkey and a horse
mare, and allowed the resulting fetus to grow for
45 days. This provided the DNA needed for the
clone.

The researchers then harvested eggs from horse
mares. After removing the nucleus from each egg,
the researchers inserted the DNA from the male
fetal cells. The eggs were then placed into the
wombs of female horses.

Out of 307 attempts, there were 21 pregnancies
and three carried to full term. Idaho Gem was born
on May 4 and Woods said identical brothers will
be born in June and August.

Donald W. Jacklin, a businessman in Rathdrum,
Idaho, paid $400,000 to finance the four-year
mule cloning project.

"Our first goal was to clone an equine, but I have a
special interest in mules," said Jacklin, who is
president of the American Mule Racing
Association.

Since mules generally are sterile, racing mule
owners cannot breed new animals from proven
race stock to build up their stable as do
thoroughbred and quarter horse owners. Mule
cloning could offer an answer.

For that reason, said Kate Snider of the American
Mule Racing Association, "cloning a brother to
Taz is a very big deal."