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Are these resurrected dire wolves the real deal or simply lookalikes ?

April 11, 2025 · Comment icon 59 comments
Dire wolf pups
Colossal's dire wolf pups. Image Credit: Colossal Biosciences / Twitter
Scientists recently claimed to have resurrected the extinct dire wolf - but are the pups really dire wolves at all ?
From dire wolves to woolly mammoths, the idea of resurrecting extinct species has captured the public imagination. Colossal Biosciences, the Dallas-based biotech company leading the charge, has made headlines for ambitious efforts to bring back long-lost animals using cutting edge genetic engineering.

It recently announced the birth of pups with key traits of dire wolves, an iconic predator last seen roaming North America more than 10,000 years ago. This followed on the heels of earlier project announcements focused on the woolly mammoth and the thylacine. This all fuels a sense that de-extinction is not only possible but imminent.

But as the science advances, a deeper question lingers: how close must the result be to count as a true return? If we can only recover fragments of an extinct creature's genome - and must build the rest with modern substitutes - is that really de-extinction, or are we simply creating lookalikes?

To the public, de-extinction often evokes images of Jurassic Park-style resurrection: a recreation of a lost animal, reborn into the modern world. In scientific circles, however, the term encompasses a variety of techniques: selective breeding, cloning, and increasingly, synthetic biology through genome editing. Synthetic biology is a field that involves redesigning systems found in nature.

Scientists have used selective breeding of modern cattle in attempts to recreate an animal that resembles the auroch, the wild ancestor of today's breeds. Cloning has been used to briefly bring back the pyrenean ibex, which went extinct in 2000. In 2003, a Spanish team brought a cloned calf to term, but the animal died a few minutes after birth.

This is often cited as the first example of de-extinction. However, the only preserved tissue was from one female animal, meaning it could not have been used to bring back a viable population. Colossal's work falls into the synthetic biology category.

These approaches differ in method but share a common goal: to restore a species that has been lost. In most cases, what emerges is not an exact genetic copy of the extinct species, but a proxy: a modern organism engineered to resemble its ancestor in function or appearance.

Take the case of the woolly mammoth. Colossal's project aims to create a cold-adapted Asian elephant that can fulfil the mammoth's former ecological role. But mammoths and Asian elephants diverged hundreds of thousands of years ago and differ by an estimated 1.5 million genetic variants. Editing all of these is, for now, impossible. Instead, scientists are targeting a few dozen genes linked to key traits like cold resistance, fat storage and hair growth.

Compare that to humans and chimpanzees. Despite a genetic similarity of around 98.8%, the behavioural and physical differences between the two are huge. If comparatively small genetic gaps can produce such major differences, what can we expect when editing only a tiny fraction of the differences between two species? It's a useful rule of thumb when assessing recent claims.

As discussed in a previous article, Colossal's dire wolf project involved just 20 genetic edits. These were introduced into the genome of a gray wolf to mimic key traits of the extinct dire wolf. The resulting animals may look the part, but with so few changes, they are genetically much closer to modern wolves than their prehistoric namesake.

Colossal's ambitions extend beyond mammoths and dire wolves. The company is also working to revive the thylacine (Tasmanian tiger), a carnivorous marsupial that was once native to mainland Australia, Tasmania and New Guinea. The last example died at Hobart Zoo in 1936. Colossal is using a genetic relative called the fat-tailed dunnart - a tiny marsupial - as the foundation. The goal is to engineer the dunnart's genome to express traits found in thylacines. The team says it is developing an artificial uterus device to carry the engineered foetus.

Colossal also has a project to revive the dodo, a flightless bird that roamed Mauritius until the 1600s. That project will use the Nicobar pigeon, one of the dodo's closest living relatives, as a basis for genetic reconstruction.
In each case, the company relies on a partial blueprint: incomplete ancient DNA, and then uses the powerful genome editing tool Crispr to edit specific differences into the genome of a closely related living species. The finished animals, if born, may resemble their extinct counterparts in outward appearance and some behaviour - but they will not be genetically identical. Rather, they will be hybrids, mosaics or functional stand-ins.

That doesn't negate the value of these projects. In fact, it might be time to update our expectations. If the goal is to restore ecological roles, not to perfectly recreate extinct genomes, then these animals may still serve important functions. But it also means we must be precise in our language. These are synthetic creations, not true returns.

Technology to prevent extinction

There are more grounded examples of near-de-extinction work - most notably the northern white rhinoceros. Only two females remain alive today, and both are infertile. Scientists are working to create viable embryos using preserved genetic material and surrogate mothers from closely related rhino species. This effort involves cloning and assisted reproduction, with the aim of restoring a population genetically identical to the original.

Unlike the mammoth or the thylacine, the northern white rhino still has living representatives and preserved cells. That makes it a fundamentally different case - more conservation biology than synthetic biology. But it shows the potential of this technology when deployed toward preservation, not reconstruction.

Gene editing also holds promise for helping endangered species by using it to introduce genetic diversity into a population, eliminate harmful mutations from species or enhance resilience to disease or climate change. In this sense, the tools of de-extinction may ultimately serve to prevent extinctions, rather than reverse them.

So where does that leave us? Perhaps we need new terms: synthetic proxies, ecological analogues or engineered restorations. These phrases might lack the drama of "de-extinction" but they are closer to the scientific reality.

After all, these animals are not coming back from the dead - they are being invented, piece by piece, from what the past left behind. In the end, it may not matter whether we call them mammoths or woolly elephants, dire wolves or designer dogs. What matters is how we use this power - whether to heal broken ecosystems, to preserve the genetic legacy of vanishing species or simply to prove that we can.

But we should at least be honest: what we're witnessing isn't resurrection. It's reimagination.

Timothy Hearn, Senior Lecturer in Bioinformatics, Anglia Ruskin University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article. The Conversation

Source: The Conversation | Comments (59)




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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #50 Posted by Piney 20 days ago
Exactly and it's 50-50 if you get a good or bad one.
Comment icon #51 Posted by iAlrakis 20 days ago
totally agree.  but certainly not dangerous like some people claim because their little pony got attacked. 
Comment icon #52 Posted by Grim Reaper 6 20 days ago
Rex was bought from a breeder, his mother was a full blooded Timberwolf and Dad was a full blooded German Shepherd. However, he didn’t look like a dog, he looked like a Wolf. He, ended up being the best and smartest Dog I have ever met and he was never vicious, the only thing that scared people was his size (weight approximately 100 lb+) and the way he looked. 
Comment icon #53 Posted by diablo_04 20 days ago
I don't  know why you are unable to realize that your anecdotal experience does not reflect the reality. End of the day a "wolfdogs" are dangerous animals to be around humans. They can and the are dangerous to other pets and kids, and you can try and justify it as much as you can but no one needs to have such breeds roaming around humans, and with a good reason they are forbidden in lot of places. Also its most likely you had a 3-4th generation of a wolfdog not a direct pup from a crossbreeding between Timberwolf and a German  Shepherd as they are forbidden in most countries. 
Comment icon #54 Posted by Grim Reaper 6 20 days ago
What personal experience do you have with Wolf Dogs? No, that’s not correct Rex was first generation breed from a full blooded female Timberwolf and a full blooded German Shepherd, there were 4 puppies and I picked Rex out of the litter myself. I also met mom and dad, this breeder was well known in Southern Missouri, however I can no longer remember his name this occurred in 1967 or 68 not sure anymore.  
Comment icon #55 Posted by flying squid 18 days ago
The genetic engineered dire wolves now can hunt the genetic engineered sheep Dolly.
Comment icon #56 Posted by Tatetopa 18 days ago
Dire wolves lived up to about 10k ago in an environment with large mammals like mammoths. Lots of fossils from La Brea tar pits. It was post glacial, no ice sheets. Having white fur on a grassy plain is not likely. DNA studies have put dire wolves in their own species, Aenocyon rather than Canus with grey wolves. They are related to African jackals as well and split off from a common ancestor a couple million years ago
Comment icon #57 Posted by MysteryMike 18 days ago
Lookalikes. They're just gray wolves that were genetically modified to resemble dire wolves. Regardless still an accomplish and one step further to de-extinction.
Comment icon #58 Posted by Amorlind 16 days ago
Hello, Just to clear this : Canis Dirus and the actual gray wolf are not all all alike...2 different lineage since approximatively 5-6 millions years...what we see here is indeed a "simple" gene modification. The Canis Dirus wont come back.
Comment icon #59 Posted by darkzoneromana 8 days ago
My Aunt had a wolfdog when my symblings and I were children. She had all these rules for us to follow when around him while visiting her. Turns out they aren't needed he was a big sweetheart. He would get so excited when we visit. There are good dogs and bad dogs just like humans the reason humans judge the big dog breads is because they can kill you. If a Chihuahua could kill humans they would have the highest death toll. How many house cats would lose their temper and kill people? Grow up and judge an animal on there personally and not how scary they are too you. Then treat them decently.


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