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13 answers

Yes. At htis time we don't know what but give it a few years and we will wish they had mess with this stuff.

2007-02-09 06:54:43 · answer #1 · answered by Alex 4 · 0 0

That is a REALLY interesting question! I don't know....wouldn't it just stay the same? That is what i think.....i mean the natural cow would mate with any cow u know? A cloned cow is exactly the same as a natural cow, so it wouldn't really make any difference if the natural cow mated with a natural or cloned cow, right? It doesn't really matter about the cloned cow and the natural cow.

Oh and since you seem interested in cloning read the book The House of the Scorpion!!!!! It is a REALLY great book!!!

2007-02-09 16:14:43 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Genetically, the cow seems to be an identical match. Unfortunately, The cloned creatures usually die faster than natural born. In the long run...cows will be cows, cloning will have very little to no effect on the cow population. Unless a ravaging disease wipes all cow kind off the planet.

2007-02-09 15:02:51 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Like every other invention of science, cloning too comes at a cost. In a documentary over TV a few days back, the rate of disease is more in Cloned cows than in Normal ones. However this will be gone once we achieve perfection in this department.

2007-02-09 14:54:57 · answer #4 · answered by nickname 2 · 0 0

Of course not. Since a "cloned" cow differs only in its point of origin and not in it substance. A cow is a cow. This idea is just a ridiculous as the idea that irradiated meat can harm you when all it does is kill off harmful things in the meat, and is of the same mentality that says eating microwave foods are harmful, when all microwaves do is excite water molecules and cause them to heat up.

2007-02-15 14:47:11 · answer #5 · answered by Wiz 7 · 0 0

Not at all. Cloned cows are no different than regular cows. They were just spawned differently. They still grew up from a calf and ate grass and all that jazz. No one would ever know the difference if they didn't tell us about it.

2007-02-09 14:53:45 · answer #6 · answered by allknowing 4 · 0 0

Clone cows are the exact same thing as natural cows... so no.

2007-02-09 14:52:39 · answer #7 · answered by John Doe IV 3 · 0 0

my bulls refuse to mate with cloned cows,

2007-02-09 21:15:31 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No.

Yet it is funny how liberals are all for cloning to cure dieases but not to be used in food.

Some would call that being a hypocrite.

2007-02-09 15:51:43 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Everything that is fed or done to animals we eat or vegetation for that matter has an affect on whom ever eats it.
I would not think these experimental animals have passed the USDA standards, but then again I could be wrong.

2007-02-09 14:55:18 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Many moons later, I'll develop a taste for my sister due to food contamination from cloning......And I don't have a sister !!!!

2007-02-16 15:18:42 · answer #11 · answered by jc 4 · 0 0

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