๐งต Untitled Thread
Anonymous at Thu, 18 Jul 2024 05:32:21 UTC No. 16286053
Why can't we selectively breed some of these into trexes?
>muh laws
Just do it on an island
>muh food
Grow cattle on one side of the island and make them feed on the free grass
>what if they run out of grass
Feed then on fast growing plants like bamboo that can grow 2 feet a day
>muh ethics
you kill hundreds of cows and chickens a year for meat
Anonymous at Thu, 18 Jul 2024 06:09:41 UTC No. 16286086
>>16286053
>Why can't we selectively breed some of these into trexes?
Too primitive. It might actually be easier to regress birds into dinosaurs than progress reptiles into dinosaurs.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/
>Just do it on an island
muh laws
Anonymous at Thu, 18 Jul 2024 06:28:21 UTC No. 16286106
>>16286053
T. Rex is a lot more evolved than the silly gator.
Anonymous at Thu, 18 Jul 2024 06:51:27 UTC No. 16286133
>>16286086
>Just do it on an island
>muh laws
There's no way there's laws against selective breeding dinos. Besides epstein was diddling kids for years and nobody found out till he got sucided.
How the fuck hasn't some random rich dude with 1m laying around not just employed a couple squatemaleans to make this work?
Anonymous at Thu, 18 Jul 2024 12:32:57 UTC No. 16287098
>>16286133
>Why can't we selectively breed some of these into trexes?
>trexes
>There's no way there's laws against selective breeding dinos
All islands are under the control of some nation or another, and being that there are some 200 nations out there, who knows what exactly is legal or not regarding selective breeding of ever-larger, and perhaps even bipedal, crocodiles.
At some point you're going to need equipment and licensing for things that have never been needed or even existed before.
Maybe start with a small lizard and try to make it fully bipedal.
https://www.reed.edu/biology/profes
Anonymous at Thu, 18 Jul 2024 12:35:45 UTC No. 16287099
>>16287098
>At some point you're going to need equipment and licensing for things that have never been needed or even existed before.
Not to mention that if you can't identify the larger offspring unless they're fully-grown through, through some genetic reading, each individual takes decades to reach full-size, so it'd be an extremely slow process.