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Who is afraid of the big, bad (dire) wolf?

Who is afraid of the big, bad (dire) wolf?

Photos courtesy of Colossal Biosciences

Advancing science may make it possible to bring back extinct species like the dire wolf鈥攂ut should it? 天美传媒 Boulder environmental studies and philosophy Professor Ben Hale says the answer is complicated


Earlier this year, Colossal Laboratories & Biosciences made headlines when it announced that鈥攖hrough the science of genetic manipulation鈥攊t had successfully re-created three dire wolves, a large wolf species that ranged across North America and South America some 10,000 years ago before going extinct. Some news outlets, including Time magazine, called the development species 鈥渄e-extinction鈥 while others touted it as 鈥渟cientifically seismic.鈥

Subsequently, other scientists challenged Colossal鈥檚 assertions of having de-extincted the species, arguing that these wolves鈥擱omulus, Remus and Khaleesi鈥攄id not meet the听 of dire wolves. That鈥檚 because Colossal did not create the animals from a fully reconstructed dire wolf genome but instead relied on a gray wolf鈥檚 genetic material and made changes to it with ancient DNA recovered from dire wolf specimens.

Meanwhile, Colossal has announced plans to bring back a variety of other extinct species, including the wooly mammoth, the Tasmanian tiger () and most recently听 a giant flightless bird that stood about 12 feet tall and weighed about 500 pounds.

However, seemingly lost amid the claims and counterclaims of whether scientists can bring back dire wolves鈥攐r any other extinct animals鈥攆rom extinction is the deeper philosophical and ethical issue: should they?

Ben Hale

As a 天美传媒 philosophy professor in the Department of Environmental Studies, Ben Hale鈥檚 primary research focus is on environmental ethics and policy. He has followed the news reports about bringing back dire wolves and other long-gone animals through the lens of ethical issues associated with the extinction and de-extinction of species.

For his part,听Ben Hale has no easy answers. A 天美传媒 philosophy professor in the听Department of Environmental Studies, Hale鈥檚 primary research focus is on environmental ethics and policy. He has followed the news reports about bringing back dire wolves and other long-gone animals through the lens of ethical issues associated with the extinction and de-extinction of species.

Recently, Hale spoke with Colorado Arts and Sciences Magazine regarding his thoughts on when it makes sense to attempt to de-extinct a species (and when it doesn鈥檛); what it means to de-extinct a species, ethically speaking; how ethicists in the larger scientific community are responding to the latest scientific breakthroughs; and his thoughts on the ethical implications of de-extincting a T-Rex. His responses have been lightly edited for grammar and clarity and condensed for space.

Question: Setting aside the issue of whether Colossal actually created dire wolves, or just something similar, why would we want to bring back an extinct species of wolf?

Hale: That鈥檚 the question, right? For some (scientists and entrepreneurs), I think there鈥檚 the relatively straightforward scientific challenge of seeing if it can be done鈥攖o de-extinct a species. The dire wolf happens to be a particularly charismatic species in no small part because it鈥檚 a large mammal that has some resemblance to a dog. Popular fantasy shows like Game of Thrones elevated the ecologically real dire wolf species even further, to a kind of magical status, so there鈥檚 an element of fantasy and science fiction that makes the dire wolf intriguing.

Still, that doesn鈥檛 speak to the kind of public-facing rationale offered by Colossal Biosciences or other folks who are engaged in de-extinction efforts. Let鈥檚 call them 鈥榙e-extinction optimists.鈥 It鈥檚 not enough, generally speaking, just to say, 鈥榃e wanted to see if we could do it,鈥 or 鈥榃e did it because we think the species is beautiful or cool.鈥 Using that as a justification starts to look a lot like Jurassic Park, right? And Michael Crichton and Stephen Spielberg and numerous others have warned us about technology unchained with these cautionary tales.

dire wolf pup

Hale says he believes part of the appeal of de-extincting dire wolves is because they resemble a dog and that popular TV shows such as Game of Thrones have elevated the status of real dire wolves to an almost magical level.听

So, the public-facing justification that de-extinction optimists will offer is that we 鈥榦we it to the species,鈥 possibly because we鈥檝e made that species extinct by something we鈥檝e done鈥攕ay, human-caused extinction鈥攐r because extinct animals can serve as important elements or components of the ecological system, given that some ecosystems are not healthy. You can make the case that we can revive those ecosystems by reintroducing apex predators that were playing a valuable regulatory function.

Question: If you bring back a creature from extinction, but the natural habitat for it no longer exists, how much have you accomplished?

Hale: I think this a question that looms large over the matter of de-extinction, particularly in an era of accelerated climate change. It may be the case that we can bring back a species that is genetically similar to a past species, but we may not have done anything to make that species function within the ecosystem. Is it in that case true that we鈥檝e brought back the species? Does it even make sense to speak of a species outside of its ecological context?

One of the stated reasons for de-extincting a species is to revive or rejuvenate deteriorating or degraded ecosystems. If you think the environment has been degraded to such an extent that it needs to have some kind of apex predator that was roaming the earth 10,000 years ago, like the dire wolf, reintroduced into the ecosystem, then it鈥檚 not clear what it means even to say that the species has been brought back. It鈥檚 not back at all. It鈥檚 just isolated somewhere. Keeping it as a specimen in Colossal Biosciences laboratories (as the company has done) doesn鈥檛 actually de-extinct the species, in my opinion.

Now, you could say that genetic replication is just the first step in a proof-of-concept de-extinction effort, and the next step is to create enough of the species that scientists can develop a viable population and then release them into the wild. Then perhaps that鈥檚 the ultimate step to de-extinction.

But听if your criterion is that whatever species is brought back derives its status from its function in the system, then it鈥檚 a mistake for them to suggest that they have de-extincted the species鈥攂ecause they haven鈥檛 yet done that.

Question: Generally speaking, how do ethicists within the scientific community think about the idea of de-extincting species? And what is your position on this subject?

Hale: I would argue that most environmental ethicists, as well as most animal ethicists鈥攖hese are two different communities of ethicists who agree on some things but disagree on many others鈥攁re extremely skeptical of these efforts to de-extinct species. I think you鈥檙e going to be hard pressed among the ethics community to find people who are excited about the potential of these听de-extinction technologies.

Personally, I tend to be more of a听moderate regarding technologies such as these. My view鈥攗nlike some of my other colleagues at other universities鈥攊s that developing technologies like this can help us to address ecological issues听in the near term, but that this gets much more complicated as we reach back in history.

With extinction, an animal can either go functionally extinct or ontologically extinct, which are two different things. For instance, the听oysters in the Chesapeake Bay are often said to be functionally extinct. There are still oysters living in the Chesapeake Bay, but they鈥檙e not serving the function that they were once serving, which was the cleaning and purification of the bay.

In that context, it would be a much more meaningful outcome for us to revive or to de-extinct oysters in the Chesapeake Bay, say, than to de-extinct the dire wolf. Oysters are important for us, and they were vitally important to many communities in the Chesapeake Bay watershed. I think we should use technologies to de-extinct functionally extinctorganisms and species.

So, it鈥檚 a balance. We don鈥檛 want to drop the ball on the de-extinction discussion inasmuch as its an important tool for ecologists, but we also don鈥檛 want to introduce Jurassic Park-style scenarios where we fetishize a charismatic species simply because it is genetically related to something that we like. Also, as we get deeper into time and deeper into history, I think it becomes more ridiculous and more problematic, ethically speaking, for us to try to de-extinct a species.

Question: So, bringing back oysters to Chesapeake Bay could fulfill a useful ecological role, but ethically it鈥檚 harder to make the case for bringing back a Tyrannosaurus Rex?

Hale: Is the de-extinction of a T-Rex the best use of our resources? My answer to that question is probably not.

Again, I鈥檓 generally supportive of research听into a variety of different technologies that help us better understand how nature works and what we can do to address concerns in our natural environment. And it may well be that some of these gene-splicing technologies do precisely that.

Dire wolves young adults

Dire wolves Romulus and Remus, along with their sister, Khaleesi, will spend their entire lives in an animal refuge. Hale says there are ethical questions as to whether a species is really made de-extinct if it鈥檚 natural habitat no longer exists.

I believe it鈥檚 important for us as a society to have robust technologies, maybe even de-extinction ones in cases ofcatastrophe or calamity鈥攎uch like seed banks or insurance policies鈥攂ut we certainly should have security in place in case things go sideways.

Question: Are there any governmental regulations at the international level, or at the national level, governing this kind of scientific work? If not, do you think there should be?

Hale: This is not an area that I tend to work in, but I鈥檓 not aware of any regulations. Personally, I do think that this kind of private sector, entrepreneurial research should be regulated.

What would it mean to regulate more pure scientific research is an interesting question. I think it would mean that you would have some kind of external scrutiny of scientific operations in an open framework that would prevent opportunists from developing a technology that could be either weaponized, which would be unusual in this context, or that would prevent ecological recklessness, as in the case of an accidental or intentional release. Given the potential ecological, environmental, and economic impacts of release, we should be very careful about allowing self-replicating but misfit entities, like a de-extincted species, into the wild. The potential for misuse here is tremendous.

I think there probably are other reasons to regulate it as well. You might be concerned about the harm or suffering that you might cause to any given specimen of that species. For example, if you鈥檙e creating a huge laboratory of failed experiments with de-extinct species鈥攕ay, a bunch of failed versions that die prematurely or live out their short lives in pain鈥擨 think that should also have some oversight.

Question: So, potentially in the pursuit of a scientific good, scientists could, possibly inadvertently, cause harm to the animals?

Hale: This was an issue with the cloning controversy, when听 was cloned. Anytime you鈥檙e experimenting with technologies of this sort, you鈥檙e going to create some mutants or some mistakes during trial runs鈥攁nd there were quite a few of those when Dolly was cloned. Some of the animals had short lives or they were born with mutations and whatnot.

This is one of the key worries for animal ethicists: that the animal will be born with defects that will cause it to suffer, or maybe that it鈥檚 destined to spend its entire life in captivity being poked and prodded. 鈥

There are a range of different reasons why animal ethicists think that we should be concerned about the well-being of animals. Some of them include their capacity to experience pain and suffering, and some of them are more abstract, likethat听they have rights. So, depending upon which sort of camp you fall in in the animal ethics literature, you may object to de-extincting individual entities for different reasons than environmental ethicists, but two sets of concerns鈥攁bout the ecology and about the individuals themselves鈥攕ort of work in tandem with one another.

Question: Do you think there is a risk that, if scientists show they can successfully bring back extinct species, some people will come to believe that conservation efforts are no longer necessary?

Hale: I think听we should be thinking hard about the problem of extinction. The reason I鈥檓 interested in de-extinction is not just because I think it鈥檚 cool, but because I think it provides a good reason for us to try to prevent extinction in the first place. That鈥檚 my real objective in exploring the question of de-extinction.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not enough, generally speaking, just to say, 鈥榃e wanted to see if we could do it,鈥 or 鈥榃e did it (de-extincted a species) because we think the species is beautiful or cool.鈥 Using that as a justification starts to look a lot like Jurassic Park, right?鈥

Ben Hale, 天美传媒 Boulder philosophy professor in the Department of Environmental Studies

I think we have good reasons to try to prevent extinction and that de-extinction alone is not going to be a solution to the problem of extinction. Potentially, it just introduces more problems. So, we should try where we can to prevent the extinction of animals or the extinction of a species.

In fact, in a lot of my work I discuss different kinds of reversal scenarios, from air pollution to geoengineering to remediation. Thinking about repair and restoration helps us see better that many of our most basic intuitions regarding environmental wrongdoing aren鈥檛, strictly speaking, about the harm that we鈥檙e doing to the environment. For instance, those who think that a company can pollute a river, say, and then right their wrong by cleaning up the pollution using remediation technologies, have a pretty limited sense of what an environmental wrong is. Environmental wrongs also happen in part because people are trespassed upon, their rights are violated, or there are other offenses to them and the world. Those kinds of cases are not properly related to de-extinction, but all of them are an effort to try to听repair past harms or restore lost value, just as de-extinction is an effort to return something that is lost.

In many cases鈥攎aybe even in most cases鈥擨 think we should essentially operate听under the assumption that interventions like de-extinctions are cases of last听resort. And this goes for many different kinds of environmental interventions like the ones I mention above: We need to try to avoid听circumstances in which we need to take drastic action to repair听things that we鈥檝e done that are damaging or wrong.

Question: Do you expect that, moving forward, companies like Colossal Biosciences will continue to pursue efforts to bring back extinct species?

Hale: I do. Again, I鈥檇 like to see scientists and governments deal with this globally, to set up some kind of听commission to create some kind of oversight or monitoring that nudges private companies away from technologies that could be used recklessly, such that they threaten existing ecosystems. This is part of the reason that I think听we should be cautious about de-extinction intervention overall. We just don鈥檛 know what the downstream impacts of our actions are going to be.


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