The
dog, named Kunxun, was cloned from a police sniffer dog by the
Beijing-based Sinogene Biotechnology Company and the Yunnan
Agricultural University, with support from the Ministry of
Public Security, the state-owned tabloid Global Times reported.
Sinogene is hoping to make it possible to achieve "volume
production" of cloned police dogs in order to significantly
reduce training times, the company's deputy general manager Zhao
Jianping told the Global Times, but he added that cloning costs
remain a major obstacle.
Kunxun, now three months old, will undergo extensive training in
drug detection, crowd control and searching for evidence, and
will become a fully fledged police dog when it is about 10
months old, the official China Daily said.
Training usually takes about five years and costs as much as
500,000 yuan, with no guarantee of success, the paper said,
citing an animal expert at the Yunnan Agricultural University.
The paper did not say how much a cloned dog would cost.
South Korean scientists created the world's first cloned dog in
2005, and two years later the country began employing cloned
Labrador retrievers to sniff out drugs for the customs service,
China Daily said.
(Reporting by David Stanway; Editing by Michael Perry)
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