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Nature 444, 137 (9 November 2006) | doi:10.1038/444137a; Published online 8 November 2006
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Faculty - Plant Cellular & Molecular Biology, Molecular Genetics & the Plant Molecular Biology / Biotechnology Program
- The Ohio State University
- Columbus, Ohio
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- Philip Morris International (PMI)
- Neuchatel Switzerland
A breed apart
Abstract
The US Food and Drug Administration may soon approve the use of cloned livestock for food. But regulatory roadblocks aren't the only thing keeping clones off the menu, as Heidi Ledford reports.
Watson 101 had already lived up to his name by the time he was 12 years old. He had the longest horns of any Texas Longhorn in the world — they spanned 101 inches (260 cm) from tip to tip, and were still growing.
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