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Colossal and the US Government Are Creating an Endangered Species ‘BioVault’

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Why This Matters

This collaboration between Colossal Biosciences and the US government marks a significant step in leveraging biotechnology for wildlife conservation. By creating a genetic 'bioVault,' it aims to preserve endangered species' genetic material, potentially enabling future de-extinction or recovery efforts. This initiative highlights the growing role of private sector innovation in addressing environmental challenges, with implications for conservation strategies and genetic data management.

Key Takeaways

The US government is partnering with Texas-based de-extinction company Colossal Biosciences to build a national repository of genetic material from endangered and threatened species. The effort comes as the Trump administration moves to weaken endangered species protections, including a recent decision to waive them to expand offshore oil and gas drilling.

In collaboration with the US Fish and Wildlife Service, scientists aim to collect cells, reproductive tissues, and DNA from the more than 2,300 plant and animal species in the US and around the world that are protected under the Endangered Species Act. The samples will be cryopreserved and stored at Colossal’s lab in Dallas, with duplicate samples distributed across the country.

The company, which last year claimed to have created living dire wolf pups, will perform genetic sequencing on the samples and make the data available to researchers and conservationists. Under the partnership, the federal government will own the samples.

“We want to back up as many samples of species as we can,” says Colossal’s chief executive officer and cofounder Ben Lamm.

Colossal is providing collection kits so that its partners in the field will be able to take samples of blood, skin, and other tissue. Lamm says collection has already started.

“This collaboration brings together the scientific expertise of the US Fish and Wildlife Service and the ingenuity of the private sector to develop new tools that can help recover species, preserve critical genetic resources, and strengthen the future of wildlife conservation,” Interior Secretary Doug Burgum says in a statement. (Fish and Wildlife, which is part of the Interior Department, did not respond to a request for more details on the partnership.)

Hypothetically, the samples could be used to rescue a species on the brink of extinction. Fish and Wildlife did this when it cloned the black-footed ferret—one of the most endangered mammals in North America—using cryopreserved cells of a ferret that died in the 1980s. Announced in 2021, it was the first instance of cloning a US endangered species. The Frozen Zoo at the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance provided the sample for that work.

Under the Trump administration, Fish and Wildlife has proposed major changes to the landmark 1973 Endangered Species Act that could roll back protections for at-risk plants and animals. The proposed changes would factor in economic and national security considerations in determining protected habitat and eliminate a “blanket rule" that automatically grants threatened species the same strict protections as endangered ones.

Earlier this year, President Donald Trump convened the so-called God Squad—a group of top administration officials that includes Burgum—to weigh whether to bypass endangered species protections in the Gulf of Mexico. The group, which has met just a handful of times since the creation of the Endangered Species Act, decided to grant exemptions to oil and gas drillers in the region. (Environmentalists sued the administration over the decision.)

Noah Greenwald, endangered species director at the Center for Biological Diversity, an Arizona-based nonprofit, says the new initiative with Colossal is consistent with the administration’s stance on conservation, in part because it doesn’t conflict with industry interests.

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