Scientists who succeeded in cloning the first ever buffalo using an advanced and cost-effective technique will next clone a Pashmina goat. Though the calf they cloned died within a week, they are not very bothered.
"Though the buffalo calf died in one week, we now know that the technique itself is correct and successful," said Riaz Ahmed Shah, who was one among the team of six scientists who cloned the world's first ever buffalo. Though the buffalo was born on February 6, the National Dairy Research Institute released the news only a day after it died of pneumonia.
"We wanted to make it public on the day of its birth. But the concerned authority was not in town and we could not go ahead," an institute official said.
On how the calf died, Riaz said the current cold weather in the region might have been a reason. "It stood up very early and began walking. So we had kept it outdoors. It got pneumonia two days before it died," Riaz said.
Though they succeeded in cloning it, not everything was alright with the calf: "It was bigger than a normal calf and also weighed heavier. We had to go for a C-section," the scientist, who works in a Kashmir university, said.
The calf, which doctors found was too large for a normal delivery, weighed 50 kg at birth while normal calves weigh 35-40 kg.
Explaining what is special about the cloned buffalo calf, Dr Riaz said: "This is the first time hand-guided
Cloned buffalo calf dies of pneumonia
Indian scientists clone world's 'first' buffalo calf