China's western Shaanxi Province is known for rugged windswept terrain and its coal and wool, but not necessarily its science. Yet at the Shaanxi Provincial Engineering and Technology Research Center for Shaanbei Cashmere Goats, scientists have just created a new kind of goat, with bigger muscles and longer hair than normal. The goats were made not by breeding but by directly manipulating animal DNA—a sign of how rapidly China has embraced a global gene-changing revolution.
Geneticist Lei Qu wants to increase goatherd incomes by boosting how much meat and wool each animal produces. For years research projects at his lab in Yulin, a former garrison town along the Great Wall, stumbled along, Qu's colleagues say. "The results were not so obvious, although we had worked so many years," his research assistant, Haijing Zhu, wrote in an e-mail.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 26 2015, @02:29AM
Backpedaling so fast that you could be put on a treadmill and run an Amazon server farm off the electricity generated.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Thursday November 26 2015, @02:48AM
Too bad everything I said is 100% true.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]