Anyone interested in rare breeds knows the threat of dying out is never far away, but could new biotechnology mean the end of extinction? asks the Countryfile presenter

By Adam Henson

Published: Wednesday, 24 May 2023 at 12:00 am


The headlines were barely believable. “Scientists begin project to bring back the dodo” is the stuff of fantasy, surely?

I’ve always been fascinated by the sad story of these flightless birds from Mauritius with their bulbous beaks. They died out in the 1690s, killed off by Dutch settlers who ate them, destroyed their forest habitat and introduced pigs, rats and dogs, which raided their nests for eggs. You don’t need to have seen the model in the Natural History Museum to know that the word ‘dodo’ is shorthand for extinction at the hands of mankind. As someone said: “You can’t get deader than a dodo!”

So I was intrigued when news broke about plans to resurrect history’s most mysterious and tragic bird. But anyone expecting a Jurassic Park breakthrough was going to be disappointed. The story was about remarkable advances in gene-editing, a technique that can modify genetic material, and the information that has been gained from a DNA sample of a dodo specimen stored in Denmark. Researchers know the dodo’s closest living relative is the Nicobar pigeon from the Indian Ocean Nicobar Islands; the big question is whether the pigeon’s genome can be edited to reflect the key traits of the dodo and how successfully it can be implanted into an egg cell.

#DidYouKnow that a dodo de-extinction project has been announced?

While backers of the project hope it will help restore #ecosystems, others think it is a distraction from living species that desperately need our help.

Read along and make up your own mind 👇🧵(1/5) pic.twitter.com/yMH8wdOvcj

— Natural History Museum (@NHM_London) February 16, 2023