Pubdate: Fri, 02 May 2008 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Lee Jiyeon, Reuters DOGS CLONED FOR DRUG SNIFFING INCHEON, South Korea - Some dogs are destined to catch Frisbees, others to sniff out the bad guys. At least that is what South Korea customs officials believe after ordering seven cloned copies of one of the best drug-sniffing dogs ever to poke a nose in bags at the airport. The puppies, born last fall, are clones of a Labrador retriever named Chase, judged by the customs service to be one of their top dogs. They have been in training almost since birth and show strong signs of possessing the genes -- and noses -- necessary to combat narcotics trafficking, according to the Korea Customs Service. "The differences are so small that I really can't tell the puppies apart," trainer Kim Nak-seung said Thursday. This first batch of clones share the name "Toppy," short for "tomorrow's puppy." They all usually "heel" together when their collective name is called and are individually identified by a scanner than reads a microchip in their ears. The customs service called on a laboratory affiliated with Seoul National University, which produced the world's first cloned dog, Afghan hound Snuppy, to make copies of Chase. The dogs were cloned using so-called somatic cell nuclear transfer, a technique of hollowing out the nucleus of a donor egg and injecting it with the donor father's genetic materials. Since the lab receives state funding, the customs service did not have to pay for the first batch of canine copies. The customs service estimates the cost at 60 million won ($60,470) each. It costs about twice that to breed and train a normal sniffer dog, but only about 30 per cent are good enough to make the grade. "This all came about from the question of how we could secure dogs with superior qualities at a low price," commissioner of the Korea Customs Service Hur Yong-suk said. The clones are expected to complete training by 2009. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek