Boca Raton, Florida Couple Pay $155,000 For Cloned Dog

I have to tell you I’m not sure how I feel about this story. I thought I would be totally against it, but I made the mistake of looking down at my seven year old hound, Max. And then at my three and a half year old hound, Remy, who looks just like Max. They aren’t related. It’s just when I went looking for a buddy for Max I came across Remy’s image on petfinder.com and I couldn’t believe how two mixed breeds could look so alike. And the fact that Remy’s name at the time was listed as Max, didn’t hurt either.

Now I have two dogs that look like brothers. Did I do it because I wanted a second Max? Maybe, but it didn’t take long to realize that Remy was his own hound and some of the things I love about Max just weren’t part of Remy’s DNA… so to speak.

But what I also found was that Remy offered his own perks. His own peculiar personality of rambunctiousness and zest for life that added a special touch to our growing pack. It made us complete… for now. ; )

Max and Remy might look like each other, but make no mistake about it, they are their own hounds. And I wouldn’t have it any other way!

If you want a clone of your dog, because you think it will be the exact same dog, I feel you might be disappointed. So far, science tells us that a cloned dog is an exact, physical copy of the dog the DNA came from. But personality-wise? I guess we’ll be finding out soon enough.

Cloned dog joins Boca Raton family’s animal menagerie

The MiamiHerald By Elinor J. Brecher

Sir Lancelot Encore spent his first Florida night in the master bedroom — along with nine other dogs, various cats and two humans — oblivious to the sensation he had caused earlier Monday.

The 10-week-old golden Labrador retriever is a clone, created in South Korea by a California biotech firm from the DNA of the first Sir Lancelot, the beloved pet of Ed and Nina Otto of Boca Raton.

The original ”Lancy” died, at age 11, in January 2008.

A celebrity from the moment he bounded off an American Airlines flight Monday night at Miami International Airport, Lancy redux ”very quickly integrated into the menagerie and held his own,”said Lou Hawthorne, CEO of BioArts, the firm that auctioned off five dog-cloning procedures last July.

The Ottos spent $155,000 to win the second-round auction.

”He’s a spunky little critter,” Hawthorne said. “He was nipping and stealing things.”

By Tuesday morning, Regis and Kelly and the BBC were clamoring for the inquisitive, 17-pound bundle of energy. The Ottos say he is the first single-birth, commercially cloned puppy in the United States.

They already have a lot of dogs: Roxanne, Scarlett and Cadbury — the yellow Labradors — Henry, Hayley, Cassidy and Oliver — the Cavalier King Charles spaniels — Zoe the bichon frisé and Cartier, the teacup Yorkie.

They also have 10 cats, six sheep and four parrots. But with 12 acres in West Boca, there’s always room for one more. So when the chance came to duplicate Lancelot, there was no hesitation.

He was just special, said Nina Otto, 66.

”He was a human dog,” said Ed, 79. ‘He read your emotions. He knew when to be with you and when to leave you alone. And he was the `crew chief’ ”of the dog population, keeping everyone in line.

“He could understand English and read hand signals.”

Ed Otto calls himself a ”serial entrepreneur.” His father, the late Edward Otto, cofounded both NASCAR and the Orange Bowl where, in the 1930s, he staged motorcycle races.

Money wasn’t an issue when they heard about the auction. Indeed, the Ottos had cryogenically banked DNA samples from their beloved Lancelot five years earlier, hoping that some day they would be able to do what they finally did.

BioArts teamed with Dr. Hwang Woo-suk, a scientist with South Korea’s Sooam Biotech Research Foundation, to produce the dog.

Hwang, a controversial figure, lost his research professorship at Seoul National University in 2004 after fraudulently claiming he had cloned human embryos and stem cells.

He was, however, involved in creating an Afghan hound clone the next year.

To create Lancelot Encore, Woo-suk took an egg from what Hawthorne called ”an indigenous Korean dog” resembling a bloodhound, replaced the egg’s innards with the late Lancelot’s DNA, then implanted the egg in a second Korean dog.

The procedure failed once, then succeeded, Hawthorne said. Two months later, Lancelot Encore was born, weighing 1.3 pounds.

The Ottos are certain he is the real deal. They say they trust Hawthorne, whom they have known for several years, since he ran a BioArts predecessor called Genetic Savings & Clone.

Were there any doubt, Nina Otto said, “we could have DNA checked. But I believe in people.”

The Humane Society of the United States lambastes pet cloning as “fraught with animal suffering and false promises . . . There is no replacing a beloved companion.”

Calling the practice ”disreputable,” the animal-welfare organization insists that “cloning cannot replicate an animal’s uniqueness. Cloning can only replicate the pet’s genetics, which influence but do not determine his physical attributes or personality.”

It is unclear whether little Lancy’s temperament will resemble his predecessor’s, but Hawthorne said that Tuesday morning, ”the little rascal” seemed to offer his own form of proof . . . against Nina Otto’s leg.

The late Lancelot ”was sexually very aggressive,” Hawthorne said.

He expects the puppy to be ”completely fertile,” able to father pups of his own. He also should have a normal life span: 12 to 13 years.

”After Dolly in 1996” — the world’s first cloned animal, a sheep — ”concern was raised about life span because she died in middle age,” Hawthorne said. “But she was put down because of a standard sheep . There was no indication she had aged prematurely.”

He does not expect the cost of dog cloning to fall much because “it’s so much trouble.”

The concept has critics, many of whom question the ethics of spending so much money on custom-designed dogs at a time when U.S. shelters kill an estimated 3 million to 4 million unwanted pets annually.

”We have to euthanize more than 20,000 a year who would have made great pets,” said Dr. Sara Pizano, who heads Miami-Dade County’s Animal Services Department.

“For $155,000, we could do spays and neuters for six months.”

But the Ottos make no apologies for wanting a do-over with Lancy.

”I give a lot of money to the Humane Society in Palm Beach County,” Ed Otto said.

Indeed, said the no-kill shelter’s founder and CEO, Jeannette Christos, the Ottos have given her shelter almost twice what their new puppy cost.

”When the new building goes up, their name will be on parts of it,” she said. Ed “has a big plaque in our lobby, and he bought us a new van.”

While the shelter is overflowing with 375 adoptable pets, ”everyone has to make their own decision,” she added. “He loved that dog so much. He’s a great supporter and does love animals.”

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Katybeth
15 years ago

Interesting. I think you can breed a lot of the same characteristics, looks, and temperament into or out of a dog. However, I don't think you will ever replace exactly what you have lost after all you have to factor in the human element. The owners of Lancy have change and this change will be reflected in their relationship with Lancelot, this alone will bring out different personality traits. Having said all this, I don't think it’s wrong, and I don't think anyone has the right to tell someone else how to spend their money. Except of-course Peta, who I would like to tell to give their SuperBowl money to the local shelters and do something right for a change. Just my opinion, of-course.

sex toys
15 years ago

thanks!

Stem cell transplant
15 years ago

Stem cells in an organism of the adult person are developed by a bone brain. It is their basic source, but it is far not the unique. Also stem cells are found out and in a fatty fabric, a skin, muscles, a liver, lungs, an eye retina, practically in all bodies and organism fabrics. They provide restoration of the damaged sites of bodies and fabrics.

K9Ring
15 years ago

That's a lot of money for a dog, but if the owners wanted the same dog so bad, then I guess it is their choice. I am just not sure how can they prove that the dog will behave the same way. He may look the same, but behavior might be different. I would rather get another puppy that is unique in his own way and enjoy his quirks.

K9Ring
15 years ago

That's a lot of money for a dog, but if the owners wanted the same dog so bad, then I guess it is their choice. I am just not sure how can they prove that the dog will behave the same way. He may look the same, but behavior might be different. I would rather get another puppy that is unique in his own way and enjoy his quirks.

Anne Good
15 years ago

Rescue a new dog and then donate the remainder of the money – different value system, I guess.

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