SCOTTSDALE, Ariz.—“Jack” wasn’t just any house cat. He was Tammy’s best friend for almost two decades.
He was her rock and emotional lifeline when her parents and brother died six years apart—beside her in times of trouble when life was too much to carry alone.
“When you get ’the one'—some people never do—they just don’t understand it,” said Tammy, a retired health care worker in Scottsdale, Arizona.
“Jack was one in a jillion. He was just a perfect gentleman. Neat as a pin.”
Jack lived to be 18—a long life, by cat standards—succumbing to cancer in February and dying in Tammy’s arms at home.
But before Jack’s cancer diagnosis, Tammy had already decided to “clone” her beloved cat, despite the high cost and uncertainty of the procedure.
“A lot of people do cloning for themselves,” Tammy said. “I know this sounds silly—I did it for Jack,” who she had neutered when he was young.
“He deserved sons.”
The cloning procedure took place two years ago for $25,000 and produced two nearly identical male kittens, each the spitting likeness of Jack.
Both kittens were born to their surrogate mother on Feb. 14, 2021—Valentine’s Day; both have extra toes on each paw and the same distinctive coloration that Jack had.
And both love to swim, travel, and carry socks in their mouth, just like Jack.
Costly and Controversial
Tammy said she knew that the procedure wasn’t only expensive, it was also controversial.She’s received many messages on Facebook that condemn her decision to clone Jack as “Satanic,” “unnatural,” and unwise for her to play God.
And these people were “ungodly rude” about it, Tammy said. For this reason, she asked that her last name not be used in this story.
However, she said that most people on social media tell her they’re curious about cloning and think it’s “amazing.”
Pet cloning involves making a genetic copy of a living or deceased pet, usually a dog or cat, by extracting DNA from the host animal to produce live embryos for placement inside a surrogate mother, where they develop until they’re born.
According to market analyst Dataintelo, pet cloning is a global market that’s projected to grow by 9.1 percent annually between 2022 and 2030.
“The market can be attributed to the increasing demand for pet cloning services, rising awareness about the benefits of pet cloning, and technological advancements in the field of pet cloning,” the company website states.
There are two types of pet cloning: the cloning on deceased animals and the cloning of live animals. Both use similar techniques.
Since the controversial birth of Dolly—the first cloned sheep—in 1996, several companies have emerged to reap the lucrative commercial rewards of pet cloning.
BioVenic and Gemini Genetics in the United States and Sinogene in China are among them. Pet cloning is also big business in South Korea, where some elite clinics fetching $100,000 for a cloned dog.
For the past 20 years, ViaGen Pets and Equine in Texas has cloned horses, livestock, dogs, and cats for hundreds of clients across the United States.
“I think most clients hope to recreate that special bond [with a deceased pet]—and I certainly understand that,” said ViaGen’s client service manager, Melain Rodriguez, who has had many cats and dogs in her lifetime.
“Although you love them all, you had a special relationship with that one special [pet] that stands out. It’s so hard when it’s gone.”
In 2016, ViaGen delivered the first cloned puppy in the United States: a Jack Russell terrier named Nubia, an identical twin of its genetic donor.
Ms. Rodriguez said ViaGen cloned horses and livestock primarily before branching out to clone pets and even threatened or endangered species.
The procedure is intricate and costly—$50,000 for a cloned dog at ViaGen—and carries the potential risk of failed embryos and unwanted heritable traits.
Several nationwide polls find that most Americans in sample groups oppose cloning on moral or religious grounds.
Opponents of animal cloning cite inherent health and safety risks, flaws in the developing technology, and the lack of government oversight and regulation.
The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) has called for a moratorium on cloned and bioengineered pets.
During the moratorium, a multidisciplinary commission would evaluate existing cloning research and technology, including regulations regarding its use.
“Our current knowledge of animal cloning indicates that there are important welfare concerns at issue,” the ASPCA position statement reads. “Reports on the health and condition of mammalian animals produced by cloning have indicated a variety of anatomical and physiological problems.
“It is difficult to document fully the consequences of cloning or bioengineered applications of companion animals since many of these activities fall outside the framework of publicly funded and regulated research programs.”
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) opposes cloning on moral grounds; it states on its website that more than 90 percent of cloned embryos are miscarried or stillborn.
“Dolly, the cloned sheep, was the sole survivor of 277 attempts. Those few who survive have serious medical problems,” a statement on the USCCB website reads.
Many scientists oppose reproductive cloning of humans for these reasons “but still favor cloning for research,” according to the statement.
The American Anti-Vivisection Society said that it opposes animal cloning as a potential threat to animal welfare.
EU Opposition to Cloning
Opposition to animal cloning is also widespread in the European Union. In surveys in 2008 and 2010, the European Consumer Organization found overwhelming opposition to cloning in European countries.More than 80 percent of respondents had concerns over cloning’s long-term effects on nature. In 2008, 58 percent found cloning “totally unacceptable for food production,” and 67 percent responded that way in 2010, and 69 percent felt cloning would risk viewing animals as commodities.
Additionally, 83 percent said they would want food labeling on products derived from the offspring of cloned animals in European supermarkets.
The organization said that commercial livestock cloning, including that of beef and dairy cattle, occurs mainly in the United States, Canada, and Argentina, with “some activity” in New Zealand, Australia, and China.
“In short, only the United States and Argentina have done much cloning of food animals,” Jaydee Hanson, policy director for the U.S.-based Center for Food Safety, told The Epoch Times.
“Most other countries treat clones as a new animal requiring extensive review. Europe and Canada do that. Japan has limited approvals of clones for food and requires labeling, which prevents most markets from carrying meat from clones or their offspring,” he said.
Mr. Hanson said that the genetically engineered GalSafe pig is the only cloned and FDA-approved meat product sold in U.S. supermarkets. But you can’t just “go to the supermarket and tell you’re getting the offspring of a cloned animal,” he said.
Large Offspring Syndrome
The center believes that animal cloning is “generally not safe,” absent long-term FDA studies, Mr. Hanson said.
“We know there are animal welfare implications; large offspring syndrome is a huge problem with cloned animals. The fetuses are large, and it kills them,” he said.
“It also happens in traditional breeding. It just happens more often with cloned animals. The thing about pets is people have such a love for their animals. That’s understandable.”
As a relatively new commercial industry, pet cloning fills a growing niche market, but there “aren’t that many people that can pay $50,000 to have a Xerox copy of their cat or dog,” Mr. Hanson said.
Part Siamese, Jack had dazzling blue eyes, a thick brown-black coat as smooth as velvet, and an extra toe on each paw because of a congenital deformity called polydactylism.
Unlike most domestic short hairs, Jack loved the water—swimming in the pool with his owner Tammy—going on long car or motorcycle rides, and walking on a leash in public.
Tammy said she desired to preserve these endearing traits in Jack through cloned offspring.
During a routine tooth cleaning at a veterinary clinic in 2015, Tammy had skin cells removed from Jack’s stomach and stored at ViaGen Pets.
In 2021, she decided to proceed with the cloning procedure.
About nine weeks later, she received two genetically cloned kittens for the price of one.
“I burst into tears when I saw them on the little carrier,” Tammy told The Epoch Times. “When they turned to look at me, I lost it. They were identical. The big paws, the bright blue eyes—identical to Jack. Perfect.”
Cloning and Public Perception
Ms. Rodriguez said that the media and Hollywood perpetuate the belief that cloning is dangerous and evil.The 1992 movie “Jurassic Park” capitalized on the public’s fear of the unknown using a fictional island populated by cloned dinosaurs that were brought back from extinction. The dinosaurs ran amok through corporate sabotage, causing mayhem and destruction when the system broke down.
“A lot of the negative thoughts about cloning have come from Hollywood,” Ms. Rodriguez said. “They think that’s what it’s like. Most people who don’t fully understand the process are the ones who tend to be the most fearful of it.”
Animal cloning—whether it involves a horse, cattle, sheep, dog, cat, or ferret—is different from normal sexual reproduction.
At ViaGen, the process begins with harvesting cells from a donor animal using a skin biopsy kit; the cells are then sent to ViaGen’s facilities for storage.
The cells remain in stasis in liquid nitrogen for weeks, months, years, and even decades, until the client is ready to clone the pet.
About 85 percent of ViaGen’s business consists of long-term storage clients, who store their pet’s donor cells at a yearly cost of $150, Ms. Rodriguez said.
The next step in cloning involves growing millions of cells in a lab environment.
Using a high-tech microscope and the “somatic cell nuclear transfer process,” the lab technician injects a single cell into a donor egg with the nucleus removed.
A jolt of electricity causes the cell to divide and grow as a living embryo.
Multiple eggs are inserted into the surrogate mother and allowed to gestate until at least one cloned kitten or puppy is born; sometimes, there’s more than one.
In most cases, the offspring are healthy and robust genetic copies of the original donor, Ms. Rodriguez told The Epoch Times.
“We do see, for the most part, that cloned animals live a normal lifespan and are just as healthy as the original animal,” with a few caveats, she said.
Ms. Rodriguez said that it’s essential for clients to have reasonable expectations about pet cloning.
For example, a cloned pet isn’t the same as the host pet that died. Given the likelihood of slight genetic variations, there might be differences in coloring, behavior, and temperament.
If a host dog or cat died from an inherited illness, that illness may carry over to the cloned offspring.
“Anything that is genetically linked, as far as illness, the clone will have the same genetics and the same potential to develop that illness at some point in its life,” Ms. Rodriguez said.
Environment plays a significant role in how a cloned pet acts and reacts. And sometimes, it’s the pet owner who’s different.
While time often heals the emotional wound of losing a pet, people change with time, Ms. Rodriguez said.
They may feel and behave differently while interacting with a genetic copy of a beloved pet that died years ago, which may influence the pet’s personality.
Yet, she said, there’s no limit to how many times one can clone a pet to resurrect that priceless bond.
“It’s a very personal decision and not for everyone. It’s the next best thing to going to the breeder and getting another dog with the same parents.”
Ms. Rodriguez acknowledged critics who feel that cloning pets is “unnatural,” and even immoral, despite the process being similar to the in vitro fertilization procedure that has become common in family planning.
The technology shows even more promise in the “conservation cloning” of threatened or endangered species.
Using cloning tools and technology, ViaGen recently decided to bring the first clones of the endangered black-footed ferret and Przewalski’s horse into the world.
Paying to Keep Emotional Bond Alive
Ms. Rodriguez said the main reason for cloning a pet is the desire to recreate the “family” bond that existed with a deceased dog or cat.It’s one way to approach enduring the grief that comes with death. For many pet owners, the cost is often no object.
“I think it’s that special relationship—that special bond they had with their pet. We commonly hear that they had many dogs, but nothing like this dog, and they can’t imagine life without this dog.”
Before cloning became an option, Tammy said that Jack was her pride and delight, an abandoned stray cat “somebody threw out because he had extra toes.”
“He was utterly stunning in every way,” she said, and cloning seemed the best and only option to continue his genetic legacy.
Jack spent two years bonding with his cloned “sons” before he passed.
“He smelled them face to face” when they first met in 2021, and “immediately started grooming them. He accepted them—loved them deeply,” Tammy said.
“They all slept together. They took care of each other. If people could be so good to each other.”
Tammy said she knows that OJ and Thud are only the likenesses of Jack as individuals.
Enduring Legacy
When Jack died, Tammy refused to have him cremated and buried him in her backyard.“I bought him a coffin and everything,” she said.
Tammy feels fortunate to have the choice of whether to clone Jack as often as she wants.
His cells will remain at ViaGen for years to come.
“He was family to me,” Tammy said. “I know he was a 17-pound little animal, but to me, he was my best friend. He was the coolest.”