• 🕸️ Pip 🕷️
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    3 months ago

    And the most annoying part is that this is incredibly fcking useless. Wooly mammoths went extinct for a reason. Large animals are becoming less and less evolutionary preferred. Wooly mammoths are adjusted for the cold while our globe is warming.

    Can we just use our fcking resources for things that matter???

    • @FoolHen@lemmy.world
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      63 months ago

      Not really, we humans killed most big land animals that we found as we expanded our territory, back when we were hunters. This happened in big “islands” like Australia and Madagascar, as well as all the small islands. There, large animals had lived in equilibrium for centuries, and their extinction matches some short time after humans arrived. An exception are the galapago islands, as they were discovered in the 19th century.

      • @Merlin@lemm.ee
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        13 months ago

        And to recreate the species they’d need hundreds of them from different genetic material. Which means they’ll likely create a single one that will eventually die and costed billions of dollars.

      • 🕸️ Pip 🕷️
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        -13 months ago

        Besides the fact that the hunting hypothesis is that; a hypothesis, there’s a lot of other factors as to why it isn’t a good idea. Mainly, ohh idk… The fact that they have had no place in nature in over tens of thousands of years? Even if we managed to create an artificial habitat and role in an ecosystem for them, they would be very vulnerable due to megafauna’s increased minimum land requirements because of their size and in danger constantly due to climate change.

    • @Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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      23 months ago

      Can we just use our fcking resources for things that matter???

      Yeah, bring back the passenger pigeon! We need more pigeons! Do something that’ll make a difference already!

      Also, can we get some dodos up in here? Where all my dumb birds at?

        • @Cocodapuf@lemmy.world
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          23 months ago

          Yeah, as I recall they’re actually really important to the ecology of Madagascar. A native species of tree simply doesn’t grow without them. And without those trees, well you can imagine that affects a lot of things.