New Scientist - USA (2021-07-17)

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Planet Earth has suffered five mass extinctions, each with the loss
of an estimated 70-95% of existing species, with a recovery time
measured in millions of years. Currently, human activity is causing the
sixth mass extinction; the largest predicted loss of biodiversity in 65
million years. Unlike previous mass extinction events, the current one
is taking place over a few centuries rather than many millennia. We need
to act now to prevent this calamity. Species are going extinct every day
and each lost species represents a permanent change to the ecosystem
it used to occupy. This catastrophic decline in biodiversity now is
threatening our own survival.
Established as a UK-based charity in December 2020, Nature’s
SAFE (www.natures-safe.com) aims to Save Animals From Extinction by
collecting, indefinitely storing and regenerating reproductive cells and
cell lines from endangered animal species. Partnering with the
European Association of Zoos and Aquaria Biobank, Nature’s SAFE is
Europe’s first charitable animal living cell bank dedicated specifically for
the preservation of endangered animal biological samples for future
animal regeneration. Working with endangered species breeding
programmes, reproductive cells from Nature’s SAFE’s Living Biobank can
be thawed and used directly in assisted reproductive technologies to
produce pregnancies in some of our most endangered animal species.
So far, Nature’s SAFE has live cells indefinitely stored from
53 species, a fraction of those that need saving from extinction.
Nature’s SAFE is a science-led initiative with a unique Network of
Expertise which has an extensive and broad knowledge of reproductive
technologies in both domestic and exotic animal species. This experience
is providing the foundation for Nature’s SAFE’s conservation work but
needs to be built upon and extended by further collaboration and research.

Planet Boost


Want to help?
As a charitable biobank, Nature’s SAFE provides this service
to zoological collections for free. It costs approximately
£100 to process and cryopreserve one sample from one
animal. Donate today at natures-safe.com to help Save
Animals From Extinction.

A project to assist environmental charities in
getting their message out. Today, a message
from Nature’s SAFE

The Living Biobank


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