Gibletsnearby
Member
I understand why people are worried about this, but I think the concerns are a bit overblown. Yes, the “revived dodo” won’t be 100% identical to the original, and yes, they’re using pigeons and chicken eggs—but that doesn’t mean the project is meaningless or harmful. The goal isn’t just to make a novelty hybrid; it’s to develop methods that could save species that are still alive but on the edge of extinction. Without experiments like this, we may never learn how to prevent real extinctions in the future. Also, humans caused the dodo’s extinction, so trying to bring something like it back feels like taking responsibility, not playing God. Nature evolves, and ecosystems adapt, but science can help guide that process responsibly. If we dismiss projects like this because they aren’t perfect copies, we might miss opportunities to actually protect biodiversity in the real world. It’s not about making a perfect historical dodo—it’s about using genetics to repair damage we caused.
