23/08/2022
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Scientists hope to revive Thylacine from extinction

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Researchers in Australia and the US are embarking on a multi-million dollar project to bring Thylacine back from extinction.

The last known individual died in the 1930s. The team behind the bid say it can be recreated using stem cells and gene-editing technology, and the first Thylacine could be reintroduced to the wild in 10 years' time.


A juvenile male Thylacine at Hobart Zoo in 1928. The animal died the day after it was photographed (B Sheppard via Wikimedia). 

Other experts are sceptical and suggest de-extinction is just science fiction. Thylacine earned its nickname of Tasmanian Tiger for the stripes along its back – but it was actually a marsupial.

The group of Australian and US scientists plan to take stem cells from a living marsupial species with similar DNA, and then use gene-editing technology to "bring back" the extinct species – or an extremely close approximation of it.

It would represent a remarkable achievement for the researchers attempting it, and require a number of scientific breakthroughs.

"I now believe that in 10 years' time we could have our first living baby Thylacine since they were hunted to extinction close to a century ago," said Professor Andrew Pask, who is leading the research from the University of Melbourne.

The population of declined when humans arrived in Australia tens of thousands of years ago, and again when Dingoes appeared. Eventually, the marsupial only roamed free on the island of Tasmania, and was ultimately hunted to extinction. The last captive individual, nicknamed Benjamin, died at Hobart Zoo in 1936.

If scientists were to succeed in reviving the animal it would mark the first "de-extinction" event in history, but many outside experts are doubtful of the science behind it. "De-extinction is a fairytale science," Associate Professor Jeremy Austin from the Australian Centre for Ancient DNA told the Sydney Morning Herald, adding that the project is "more about media attention for the scientists and less about doing serious science".

The idea of bringing back the Thylacine has been around for more than 20 years. In 1999, the Australian Museum started to pursue a project to clone the animal, and various attempts have been made at intervals ever since to extract or rebuild viable DNA from samples.

This latest project is a partnership between scientists at the University of Melbourne and Texas-based company Colossal. The US firm made headlines last year with its plans to use similar gene-editing technology to bring Woolly Mammoth back to life.