Fire fighting is a process that has been tried many years ago, but has never been completely successful. Ethics and results of this mentality are questioned, but the extinction may really benefit humans and the environment, and many scenarios that people think may happen are virtually impossible. In order to truly restore seeds, certain conditions must be fulfilled, and the horrible situation that people think may happen can not actually be made due to lack.
Entering Beth Shapiro, a professor of biology at the University of California at Santa Cruz, she is well received by the 2015 book How to Clone Mammoths exploring rewriting circles, especially extinct science and awkward ethics. Extinct species revive various technologies such as cloning, genetic engineering, selective breeding. Shapiro's bear research focuses on the impact of climate change on the composition of Arctic polar bear and grizzly bear. The two bears are very closely related and can even breed and produce fertile turnip. According to her research, polar bears trapped in the Alaska Islands were "changed" to brown bears during the past 12,000 years because they were in contact with grizzly bears scattered from the continent of Alaska.
Evolution theory biologist Beth Shapiro's book "How to Mammoth Cloning" explores the ethics of extinction and as long as mammoth is brought to life, mammoths and their insect elephants' mothers are cruel and do not bring much benefit Hmm. She told the BBC that mammoth could be a very social creature, and live individuals would never live in the wild. Instead, clones will be destined to be imprisoned in a lonely life. In a comment by National Geographic magazine in 2013, Pimm writes, "Protection is an alternative and sustainable future for people, forests, wetlands, molecular gimmicks are not dealing with these core issues at all." "The worst thing is to attract the authorities and faculty to think that they are saving the world, which gives malicious developers a veil to hide their greed and promises to solve the problem later We promise to do biodiversity "