The experiment was never tried again because by then the Spanish government had released goats into the mountains to replace the ibex,and so the team despaired they were too late. The ibex had lost its habitat. It had effectively gone extinct twice.
Archer hopes there will be a happier ending for the gastric-brooding frog,an extinct Australian species he’s been working to clone since a colleague discovered some intact tissue cells “miraculously still tucked away at the back of an old university freezer”. This frog first caught the eye of medical researchers for its bizarre ability to turn its stomach into a womb and vomit up its babies. “Nothing else in nature can do that,” Archer says. But before it could be studied,in the mid-1980s,it vanished. Then in 2013,Archer’s team had a breakthrough. The extinct frog’s DNA began to replicate when it was implanted in donor frog eggs. Under the microscope,the team watched the embryos start to develop with growing excitement.
“But suddenly it just stopped,” Archer says. The team believes the problem lies not with the DNA,but with their technique for cloning amphibians. “We hit the same wall when we tried a living frog’s DNA. We just need to get one[species] back,one of these[de-extinction] projects over the line,and people will see we’re not making monsters.”
What does bringing back a mammoth have to do with climate change?
OK,soJurassic Park probably won’t happen but what about aPleistocene Park for the king of that Ice Age,the woolly mammoth? These towering herbivores were hunted to extinction by early humans some 10,000 years ago,the very last of them surviving on Arctic islands until 4000 years ago. But the mammoth is still the closest genetic relative to the now endangered Asian elephant. “Even closer than the African elephant,” Church says.
He believes resurrecting the mammoth’s ancient genes could stop the Asian elephant from following it into extinction. Splicing in traits that helped the mammoth thrive in the Arctic could open up crucial new habitat,as land-clearing and poaching closer to the equator increasingly whittle down their numbers. Endangered species are already relocated,with varying success,by conservationists,and their genes managed via breeding programs to protect diversity.
Church estimates that editing in about 40 to 100 mammoth genes,chiefly around cold resistance,will be enough to allow Asian elephants to thrive up north. Separate projects have edited about that number in pigs,for different traits,and Church says they are now breeding whole generations of healthy,engineered animals.
In the case of his mammophant,the team would grow the animal in an artificial womb to avoid any risk to the endangered elephant they would otherwise have to use as a surrogate. That means there’s an extra hurdle to scale – growing a mammal artificially,all the way from fertilisation to birth,hasn’t been done before. Church expects to crack the problem in about five years,in mice first,which have a faster gestation period than elephants (20 days versus 22 months). “Then it’ll probably take another five to adapt it to larger animals and then we can see how it scales up for the mammoth.”
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If it works,he already has a place to put the herd. Since the ’90s,a group of Russian scientists has been transforming a huge swathe of land in Siberia back to the grasslands that mammoths and other large animals once roamed. It really is called Pleistocene Park and,with the mammoth’s help,some think it could actually slow climate change. Grasslands can absorb more carbon than forests,and mammoths rip down trees and create this tundra as they go. But,more importantly,their heavy feet also trample snow cover,stopping it from acting as insulation and so allowing the permafrost to be chilled by the icy Arctic winds. In theory,Church says this should help slow its thaw,which eventually threatens to releasemore carbon and methane than the atmosphere holds today.
But Ritchie questions why you would bring back a mammoth,a creature of the Ice Age,to a rapidly warming world? “You’re not going to have herds of thousands of mammoths in time to have a real impact on the permafrost,given how fast it’s melting now with climate change,” he says. “You’ll just end up with an elephant that can’t handle the heat,and probably,a freak show. We have to think very carefully about how the world is going to be when we consider what to bring back.”
What happens when we put an extinct animal back in the wild?
There’s not much point resurrecting a species if it will face the same threat of extinction soon after,like the Pyrenean ibex muscled out of its mountains. And de-extinction proponents stress that animals should fill an empty ecological niche too. When wolves were hunted out of Yellowstone National Park in the United States,elk numbers exploded. With no predator to keep them in check,they tore up the grasses and rivers. Suddenly,the beavers had vanished too. “And when they brought the wolves back,70 years later,the ecosystem was restored,” Church says.
Of course,for this more classical “rewilding” to work with a resurrected animal,it needs to act the way its ancestor did. But not everything is encoded in genes. How will an engineered mammophant,for example,learn to migrate across the Arctic tundra as mammoths once did if there’s no parent to show it the way? And what if cutting and pasting together species’ genomes,in this case of elephant and mammoth or thylacine and Tasmanian devil,interferes with other natural instincts?
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These are problems Archer ponders a lot. “You could even have two sets of instructions[in the DNA] that are contradictory,” he says. “But don’t forget that the mammoth is a kind of specialised elephant,so most of the genome is already the same. Tasmanian devils,too,are close enough to thylacines,even though they’re smaller.” For his part,he believes “we’ll have 99 per cent original behaviours in resurrected species”. Most behaviour really is gene-deep in animals,he says,even the strange case of the gastric-brooding frog swallowing its fertilised eggs. “No frog teaches another frog to do anything,they’re on their own from the moment they’re a tadpole.”
In the case of a resurrected thylacine,there won’t be much to compare it to. There are few records of how the marsupial lived,so some ecologists warn not enough is known to bring it back safely. Archer is quick to point out that the thylacine vanished from Tasmania only 90 years ago,and from the mainland at the same time as the devil (which is itself being considered for reintroduction over the Bass Strait) some 3200 years ago. “We know what it’s going to do. It’s going to become the king of beasts[in Australia] again.”
But consider the case of the passenger pigeon that Novak hopes to bring back to North America. One hundred and fifty years ago,they were the most abundant bird on the planet. And,though they numbered as many as six billion,Novak says there were only three or four flocks flying the world at any one time. When they moved from forest to forest,they came in like a hurricane or a forest fire,breaking branches,destroying canopies and forcing those woods into regeneration cycles.
“No other birds do this,” Novak says. “They were ecosystem engineers. Some of the restoration we thought fire did to the landscape we’ve now shown the birds did.” Novak argues the forest needs them back. He and his team have sequenced the pigeon’s genome and compared it to its closest living relative,the bandtailed pigeon. Of the 25-million-odd genes where they differed,Novak has identified about 30 that could be particularly significant in making a pigeon behave like a passenger pigeon,such as disease resistance and,potentially,extra-social behaviour.
So here’s his plan:Novak imagines a carefully controlled release,first on a netted reserve with nesting baskets packed into dense trees,encouraging the birds to breed in colonies and,to fool them into thinking they are already part of a much bigger flock,with speakers blasting pigeon calls and coos. If the birds gang up as planned,they would be fitted with GPS trackers and set free,by the thousand or so.
With enough funding,which Novak ballparks at about $US25 million,he thinks he could create a live passenger pigeon in the lab within seven years using CRISPR. Parallel work focused on breeding shows it would only take a few more years to build up a healthy sustainable population of 10,000 birds or so. That won’t be enough to make a dent in forests the way the sky-darkening flocks of the last century did. Still,Novak says,it’s a start.
But does that mean that monster pigeon swarms will start descending on cities like New York? Historically,Novak says,the birds stayed clear of urban centres as there was not enough food. “The bigger their flocks get,the more they will stay remote,near tree cover.” And,if things do get out of hand,he says we already know what to do:it was just a few decades of hunting that wiped out those billions of birds in the first place.
What if we crash the ecosystems we’re trying to save?
But suppose passenger pigeon flocks really are too much for American forests already scarred by record wildfires. Or that bizarre little frog becomes the next cane toad. Some have even wondered whether ancient viruses,entangled in the DNA of long-dead species,could be reawakened (cue the buzzing mammoth carcass in the TV sci-fi thrillerFortitude).
Archer,who himself was the first ecologist tosound the alarm on the danger of cane toads in Australia,says thefossil record can offer important clues as to how an ecosystem will fare with a reintroduced species. When he ventured into the Tasmanian bush with one of the last people to see thylacines in the wild,he found their habitat was broadly unchanged since the 1930s. Peter Ward,in his 90s on the hike,had trapped and hunted the tigers as a boy with his father and brother,back when there was a bounty on the marsupials’ head (due to now-debunked fears that thylacines were eating livestock). At the end of the track,Ward’s family hut was still there,just as he’d left it,tins of food still on the shelf. “Tears came into his eyes,” Archer says. “He even remembered what they sounded like. He said they’d make thisyip yip yipsound as they circled the hut at night. The forest hasn’t moved on.”
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Novak says ecosystems are not a house of cards. “When they have the right pillars – our keystone species like predators and pollinators and herds – then they’re more like a tower that an earthquake wobbles,but it doesn’t collapse.”
Besides,Church adds,the larger the animal,the easier a reintroduction is to reverse. Just as feral goats were removed from the Galapagos Islands,rounding up wayward mammoths wouldn’t be impossible.
But while thylacines could help with Australia’s feral cat problem,as dingoes do on the mainland,Archer says it’s not quite a wolves-in-Yellowstone situation. “They’re not going to be chasing the big animals.” In Tasmania,where there are no dingoes,thylacines would be competing for smaller prey with the Tasmanian devil. On the mainland,it might put pressure on the quoll too. These are both endangered species themselves,and so the thylacine’s impact would have to be closely monitored,Archer says,released as a trial in fenced areas first.
“But 99 per cent of the time,with some careful planning,what happens is what you intend. This is the part of conservation we already know how to do well.”
Indeed,for all the focus on worst-case scenarios,Novak says he could only find one instance of a conservation reintroduction backfiring,after analysing more than a century of US “rewildings”:when moving some endangered water birds into a wetland in 1988 caused others in the area to die off.
In America,regulators have now green-lit the world’s first release of a de-extinct species:a chestnut tree. Once the most abundant on the continent,the towering tree has been genetically engineered to survive the imported fungus that wiped it out eight decades ago. Some Native American tribes have even agreed to replant it on native land. Regulating the chestnut’s return was no easy task and Novak hopes it will now be a guiding light for future de-extinctions,though he admits “mammoths and pigeons are a whole different ball game to trees”.
But,just as gene-editing can bring back life,it can also end it. Gene drives hold awesome power to accelerate evolution and take out feral populations by spreading edits that disadvantage or kill a pest species quickly. Scientists have even proposed such an approach totackle the mouse plague gripping Australia’s east. Novak says gene drives must be used carefully,but “sometimes the risk of doing nothing,whether that’s gene drives or de-extinction ... is actually a lot worse”.
Will de-extinction help conservation? Or are we playing God?
For scientists eyeing de-extinction projects,there are a lot of vacancies out in the wild in need of filling. Novak says the technologies being developed will benefit existing endangered species too as their gene pools narrow,from the black-footed ferret to the northern white rhino,pictured below. “The passenger pigeons and the mammoths,they’re our moon shots,” he says. “This is never going to replace traditional conservation.”
But others worry that critical funding will be taken away from on-the-ground recovery efforts and shunted into pie-in-the-sky de-extinction projects. Australia has some of the world’s highest extinction rates but spends a tenth of what the US does on conservation efforts. De-extinction,if proven to work,will still carry a higher price tag than traditional conservation. At this late hour,Ritchie says,funnelling more funding into proven methods is a safer bet.
Novak understands the concern but says funding for de-extinction projects so far generally comes from sources not already investing in conservation,such as big tech. “We’ve tried hard[at Revive&Restore] to get money from new places like biotech companies,even Facebook.” Since the not-for-profit was founded by conservationist Stewart Brand in 2012,Novak says about 90 per cent of the funding it’s raised has been spent on genetic rescue,such as their work with ferrets,not de-extinction. With the birth of Elizabeth Ann,he says those projects are advancing enough that they might begin to compete with traditional conservation. “But in conservation,we always fight for funding to re-introduce this species or that one. It’s always triage.”
Archer,who says money for his own frog project comes primarily from people interested in the technology rather than the frog,stresses that forcing a choice between de-extinction and conservation will crush innovation. In Australia,where life has evolved over the past 50 million years cut off from the other continents,he says the case for de-extinction is especially strong. “We have this added responsibility because our animals just don’t exist anywhere else. We’re a whole distinct branch of the global genome.”
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Ritchie recalls the story of an Australian naturalist who took a taxidermied northern quoll into parts of the Northern Territory where it had vanished. “A local Aboriginal woman just held it,crying,when she saw it again. It was one of her totemic species,and that pain,that loss,was still so strong.”
Archer and Church say de-extinction could help end the doom and gloom of conservation,turning it around from an unwinnable war into something that could capture the public’s attention (and perhaps real funding). But will the path there be littered with ghastly mistakes,animals trapped in awful lives because ofediting blunders?
“Genetic power’s the most awesome force the world has ever seen but you wield it like a kid who’s found his dad’s gun,” Jeff Goldblum’s character Dr Ian Malcolm warns inJurassic Park.
“How can we stand in the light of discovery and not act?” counters the park’s creator John Hammond,played by Richard Attenborough.
Like Benjamin the thylacine,many of the species we have lost in the past century or two also died of the cold – of our indifference,our cruelty,our thoughtlessness. But does that mean we have a moral obligation to bring them back,as Brand says,to a world that misses them?
Also in this sci-fi explainer series ...