Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried

The Canadian Press, 09 Dec, 2015 11:34 AM
    LOS ANGELES — A team of veterinarians, scientists and lab workers gathered around a surrogate hound and watched her give birth to seven half-pound puppies, the first dogs ever conceived in a test tube.
     
    "We each took a puppy and rubbed it with a little towel and when it started to squiggle and cry, we knew we had success," said Dr. Alexander Travis, who runs the lab at the Baker Institute for Animal Health at Cornell University's College of Veterinary Medicine in Ithaca, New York.
     
    "Their eyes were closed. They were just adorable, cute, with smooshed-in faces. We checked them to make sure they looked normal and were all breathing," he said.
     
    The puppies born July 10 are a mix of beagle, Labrador and cocker spaniel and are now healthy 5-month-olds, Travis said. All but one female were adopted. She's being kept by the lab to have her own litter.
     
    The lab kept track of the puppies by painting their nails with different colour polish. Travis adopted two, still known by their nail polish names, Red and Green.
     
    In vitro fertilization, the process of fertilizing an egg with sperm outside the body, is widely used to assist human reproduction these days. The first human birth from IVF took place in 1978.
     
    But IVF efforts with dogs repeatedly failed until now, according to Dr. Pierre Comizzoli, a reproductive physiologist for the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute in Front Royal, Virginia, which works with Cornell.
     
    "The biology of the dog is really, really different than humans," Comizzoli said. Dog pregnancies last only two months and females go into heat just once or twice a year, releasing immature eggs instead of mature eggs needed for IVF.
     
    An earlier experiment at Cornell helped pave the way. In 2013 at Cornell, Klondike became the first puppy born from a frozen embryo. Klondike's beagle mother was fertilized using artificial insemination. Her embryos were collected, frozen and implanted in Klondike's surrogate mother.
     
    Comizzoli described the birth of the seven puppies "as a huge breakthrough."
     
    A paper describing the Cornell litter as "the first live births from in vitro fertilized embryos in the dog" appeared Tuesday in the PLOS ONE journal.
     
    The lead author, Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute doctoral fellow Jennifer Nagashima, said IVF technology in dogs could prove useful in everything from conserving endangered species to removing "deleterious traits from breeds," with research potentially applicable to "models for human disease" as well.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    India's 'Real Dirt' Lies In Minds, Needs A Clean-up: President Pranab Mukherjee

    President Pranab Mukherjee here on Tuesday exhorted people to go strongly with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Swachh Bharat Mission but ensure the society was first cleansed from within as evinced by Mahatma Gandhi through his life.

    India's 'Real Dirt' Lies In Minds, Needs A Clean-up: President Pranab Mukherjee

    Mayor Calls Mount Polley Permit Early Christmas Present For Cariboo Miners

    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government has approved a permit allowing water discharge from a mine that was the centre of an environmental disaster, and the decision has drawn cheers from the area's mayor.

    Mayor Calls Mount Polley Permit Early Christmas Present For Cariboo Miners

    Opposition To Alberta Government's Farm Safety Bill Continues To Grow

    Opposition To Alberta Government's Farm Safety Bill Continues To Grow
    Bill 6 would make Workers' Compensation Board coverage mandatory for farm workers and would cancel the agriculture sector's exemption from occupational health and safety rules.

    Opposition To Alberta Government's Farm Safety Bill Continues To Grow

    Wall Says He's Not An Outlier On Climate Talks In Paris; Promotes Carbon Capture

    Wall Says He's Not An Outlier On Climate Talks In Paris; Promotes Carbon Capture
    REGINA — Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says he's not an outsider at an international climate change conference in Paris.

    Wall Says He's Not An Outlier On Climate Talks In Paris; Promotes Carbon Capture

    Taxpayers Paying For Justin Trudeau Children's Nannies

    Taxpayers Paying For Justin Trudeau Children's Nannies
    A spokesperson for Justin Trudeau is defending the prime minister's use of taxpayer dollars to finance two nannies who are helping to look after the family's three children.

    Taxpayers Paying For Justin Trudeau Children's Nannies

    Two Canadian Brothers Free Eagle From Trap; Video Of Release Goes Viral

    Two Canadian Brothers Free Eagle From Trap; Video Of Release Goes Viral
    SUDBURY, Ont. — The heroics of two northern Ontario brothers who freed a bald eagle from a leghold trap last week have gone viral.

    Two Canadian Brothers Free Eagle From Trap; Video Of Release Goes Viral