Thursday, July 17, 2008

Guillaume Seignac The Wave painting

Guillaume Seignac The Wave painting
Steve Hanks Interior View I painting
recent study found that only 2 percent to 5 percent of attempts to clone animals actually succeed, and that the animals who are born often develop serious health problems. Many appear normal, but harbor genes that don't express themselves properly. While it's unclear what kind of effect that may have on the animals, or on the people who eat their products, some cloned animals, including Dolly the cloned sheep, have shown strange symptoms like becoming abnormally obese.Infigen claims their patented cloning technique is different. They boast a 17 percent success rate and say their cows that actually come to term are born are healthy. Bishop refuses to say what's different about his company's process that allows such a high percentage of successful, healthy births, as well as healthy adult cows. He only answers that he doesn't know why everyone else has problems, he just knows Infigen doesn't.But for the milk, there is still the initial public relations war to win. Bishop says he's not too worried about the FDA, it's the milk-drinking, ice-cream-eating

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