💨 Abstract
Scientists are working to save the endangered ocelot in the U.S., a wild cat with fewer than 100 remaining in South Texas. They are trying artificial insemination and in vitro fertilization to breed captive ocelots using sperm from wild cats. The efforts have been unsuccessful so far, with no viable pregnancies.
Courtesy: theprint.in
Summarized by Einstein Beta 🤖
Suggested
Rajasthan centre racing to save Great Indian Bustard clocks big win(g)—1st captive-born chick of 2025
Israel's halt to food and aid deliveries worsens Gaza conditions
ServiceNow to buy AI firm Moveworks for $2.9 billion to tap new customers
London's Tower Bridge reopens after person climbs down from railings
Explainer-What is driving the bloodshed in Syria?
Huge fire off English coast after oil tanker and cargo ship collide
Greenland holds parliamentary election amid renewed US interest
Maradona death trial stirs emotions, anger in soccer-mad Argentina
Gold eases as firm dollar offsets safe-haven demand
India should protect its national interest while negotiating with US: RSS-affiliate SJM
Powered by MessengerX.io