Because scientists have limited resources, a decision to do one thing is a decision not to do another. A decision to spend millions of dollars on bringing back one species is a decision to neglect others and possibly allow them to go extinct. We already have many animals—such as elephants, tigers, rhinos, and gorillas—that are in serious danger of disappearing. Why not focus on keeping them alive?
Bringing back extinct species is risky. In most cases, the animals’ habitats are gone or have been seriously altered. Mammoths, for example, went extinct after the Arctic began warming 10,000 years ago. It’s much warmer there now than it was then, and it’s getting hotter every year. If we were to bring back mammoths, we would probably need to spend a tremendous amount of money just to keep them alive. There’s also the risk that reintroducing long-extinct species would actually hurt the environment by disrupting existing local ecosystems.
The evidence is overwhelming: De-extinction isn’t a good investment for the planet. It may be interesting science, but it’s not conservation.
—Joseph Bennett
Assistant Professor of Biology, Carleton University