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Progress claimed in quest to clone mammoth
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Sept 12, 2012


There may be some life left yet for the woolly mammoth, according to controversial research by Russian and South Korean scientists that has raised hopes the extinct animal could be cloned.

The team of researchers from Russia and South Korea said they had discovered mammoth tissue fragments buried under metres of permafrost in eastern Siberia that could contain living cells.

The existence of the cells -- perhaps too few to achieve successful cloning, and treated with scepticism by many stem cell scientists -- must still be confirmed by a South Korean lab.

But expedition member Sergei Fyodorov of Russia's Northeastern Federal University said the discovery in the far north of the vast Yakutia region of eastern Siberia could soon lead to actual woolly mammoth cloning attempts.

"We discovered the mammoth tissue fragments in eastern Siberia in early August," Fyodorov told AFP in a telephone interview Wednesday.

"It seems that some of the cells still have a living nucleus. We saw that with portable microscopes on the spot -- the cells appeared in colour," said the scientist.

The mission has struggled for credibility amid doubts that permafrost could keep anything alive for millennia and eventually give humans a chance to recreate extinct animals that once roamed the planet.

One of the participants in the expedition was the hugely controversial South Korean cloning pioneer Hwang Woo-Suk of South Korea's Sooam Biotech Research Foundation.

Hwang was a national hero until some of his research into creating human stem cells was found in 2006 to have been faked. But his work in creating Snuppy, the world's first cloned dog, in 2005, has been verified by experts.

Russia's state-run RIA Novosti news agency cautioned in a commentary that "the cloning of mammoths is being indefinitely postponed" because the find -- whatever it may have contained -- was too small.

The mammoths are believed to have vanished fewer than 4,000 years ago -- a flash in geological terms that coincided with the rise of the Bronze Age in Egypt.

Scientists set their sights on the animal after global warming thawed parts of Siberia, raising hopes a mammoth could be cloned using technology like that used in Scotland in 1996 to produce a cloned sheep called Dolly.

The same Russian researchers went on their first woolly mammoth hunt with a team from Japan in the late 1990s and found traces of skin that turned out to have belonged to a rhinoceros.

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Poachers kill 100 S.Africa rhinos in two months
Johannesburg (AFP) July 17, 2012 - Poachers have killed 100 rhinoceros in South Africa in less than two months, a surge in killings that took the tally for the year to 381, authorities said Wednesday.

More than half of the animals were killed in the world-famous Kruger National Park with the rate of the slaughter likely to mean that the year's final tally will pass last year's carnage of 448 animals poached.

"The latest rhino poaching statistics indicate that a total of 381 rhinos have been killed since the beginning of this year," the department of environmental affairs said.

With roughly 20,000 rhinos, South Africa is home to up to 80 percent of the world population.

But the country has seen a devastating increase in poaching in recent years as black market demand for rhino horn has grown with numbers leaping from just 13 in 2007 to 333 in 2010.

Heightened security measures have failed to stop the criminal syndicates that officials say are responsible for the killing.

The animals' distinctive horns are hacked off to be smuggled to the lucrative Asian black market, where the fingernail-like substance is falsely believed to have powerful healing properties.

On the black market, the horns are worth their weight in gold.

"You can put all the resources at home, but if you don't address the demand outside South Africa, you will not win the battle," the department's spokesman Albi Modise told AFP.

Soldiers and specialist investigators have been deployed to national parks to battle the poachers.

Despite the rise in the numbers of killings since July, the number of arrests has slightly gone up to 199 from 176 suspects held two months ago.



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FLORA AND FAUNA
New Research Suggests Bacteria Are Social Microorganisms
Washington DC (SPX) Sep 12, 2012
New research from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology reveals that some unlikely subjects--bacteria--can have social structures similar to plants and animals. The research shows that a few individuals in groups of closely related bacteria have the ability to produce chemical compounds that kill or slow the growth of other populations of bacteria in the environment, but not harm their own. ... read more


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