NationStates Jolt Archive


Mules face off in race of the clones

IL Ruffino
25-05-2006, 14:39
Genetically identical runners will test nature vs. nurture

By Paul Elias
The Associated Press
Updated: 9:57 p.m. ET May 24, 2006


STOCKTON, Calif. - In a low-stakes mule race in a remote corner of the West, nature versus nurture will be put to the test as two of the horse family’s earliest clones challenge naturally bred runners next month in Nevada.

It’s not exactly the Kentucky Derby, but two cloned mules named Idaho Star and Idaho Gem will compete in a professional mule race in Winnemucca, Nev., where the professional mule racing season begins.

Idaho Gem was the first animal from the horse family cloned, and his brother, Idaho Star, was the third. Both were born three years ago and carry identical DNA taken from a fetus produced by the same parents that sired a champion mule racer named Taz.

Because Gem and Star have been separated for two years and trained separately, watching how they perform against each other will offer insight into the role played by environmental variables, such diet and training regimens, in developing racing mules.

Though the jokes about the two clones finishing in a dead heat are legion, no one is expecting a tie. And just because they carry the DNA of a past champion, there’s no guarantee the clones will be successful.

“We know they have the genetic capability to be great,” said Don Jacklin, who leases Idaho Gem from the University of Idaho for about $1,000 a year. Jacklin has hired a professional mule trainer to prepare Idaho Gem for its racing debut.

“We don’t know if they are going to have ... the attitude to want to run and want to compete and want to win.”

Gordon Woods, the lead scientist who created the clones, declined to handicap their chances.

URL: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/12955941/?GT1=8199
GO GEM GO!