Extinct Animals That Might Come Back
There are some extinct species such as the woolly mammoth shown above that may be brought back to life if scientists can overcome some.
Extinct animals that might come back. Extinct animals could come back. Threatened or damaged ecosystems could be restored with the help of certain now-extinct species. To be considered endangered there must be fewer than 2500 mature snow leopards and they must be experiencing a.
Hunting habitat destruction of their swamps and the introduction of predators such as foxes dogs and dingoes all led to their demise. This is soo sad i what to save all animals. Stellars sea cow grew to at least 8 or 9 meters.
Vigorous breeding programs and a decrease in the islands feral pets have helped them come back from the brink around 750 individuals are. How will they respond to and change their new environment. Of all the extinct animals the Javan tiger is probably the most likely to still be around.
Bees have long been talked about as a species that may go extinct relatively soon. De-extinction started showing promise as early as 2003 when a mountain goat that had gone extinct three years before was reborn in a lab though it died minutes later. The last time anyone recorded a sighting of the Somali elephant shrew was almost 50 years ago after which it was assumed to have become extinct.
They are the first species of Dolphins that have been driven to extinction by the activities of human beings. A large species of animals and birds have gone extinct on this planet over the millennia. Even called as the Somali Sengi this mouse-sized animal with its distinctive elongated nose is thriving across the Horn of Africa.
The Baiji River Dolphin was found in the Yangtze River of China until 2002. Camelops extinction was part of a larger North American die-off in which native horses mastodons and other camelids also died out - possibly from global climate change and hunting by the Clovis people. The Quagga Project started in 1987 is an attempt to bring them back from extinction.