Dire Wolf “de-extinction” and investing in the planet

It isn’t that they can’t see the solution.
It’s that they can’t see the problem.
~ G. K. Chesterton

There’s an article in the latest New Yorker about the genetics start-up Colossal and their “de-extinction” of the Dire Wolf. They’ve set their sights on resurrecting the dodo, the wooly mammoth and the thylacine as well. Actually, none of these are the resurrection of the named species, they are partial facsimiles—mutated versions of existing genomes that create animals with traits resembling extinct species. The resurrected Dire Wolf is really just a grey wolf with 20 edits in 15 genes that modify traits like coat color, skull development and vocalization. Since we know nothing about Dire Wolf behavior, there’s no way of knowing what adaptive behavioral traits may have distinguished the historical Dire Wolf.

Look, I’m a molecular geneticist. Genome editing technology is the tool we dreamed of, and I’ve published my views on the topic of genome editing in humans, agriculture and pest species. The problem with the Colossal project, as I see it, is that the hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent on a technical tour-de-force while the planet burns. The so-called “de-extinction” fills a much-needed gap. Meanwhile, real species are going extinct at a rapid and growing rate due to human activity. Before we invest in reviving extinct species, let’s invest in preventing extinctions in the first place.

Megafauna like the Dire Wolf and the wooly mammoth capture the public imagination. If you watched Game of Thrones, you know how telegenic a Dire Wolf can be (albeit the size of the GoT Dire Wolf was greatly exaggerated). Much of the life threatened with extinction today isn’t sexy—invertebrates, birds, wild plants. But in terms of the consequential biomass on the planet, they have more impact than a few thousand fake Dire Wolves, wooly mammoths, dodos and thylacines, which may themselves go extinct if released in the wild as planned.

The CEO of Colossal makes the point that the investors in this project weren’t choosing between de-extinction and extinction prevention. They would likely have invested in some unrelated project. He’s probably right. But it isn’t that Colossal can’t see the solution, it’s that they can’t see the problem.