seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Sweden
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from China
seen from Romania

seen from Argentina
seen from China
seen from China

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Reading an article and I fell in love with this sentence instantly. The year 2020 may have sucked due to that annoying little thing that happened but at least the cricket geneticists were out there kicking ass and taking names
new mouse just dropped
This is asking only about your DIRECT genetic ancestors: parents, grandparents, etc. Do not count aunts/uncles or anyone who is not related to you by blood.
How many of your direct genetic ancestors (parents, grandparents, etc) are still alive?
None
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9 or more
Unknown– I have someone who may or may not actually be a genetic ancestor
Unknown– I don't know who they are and/or if they're still alive
We ask your questions anonymously so you don’t have to! Submissions are open on the 1st and 15th of the month.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Meet Sibert and Red Cloud, baby black-footed ferrets that mark the first successful live births from a cloned endangered species.
"Once thought to be extinct, black-footed ferrets are the only ferret native to North America, and are making a comeback, thanks to the tireless efforts of conservationists.
Captive breeding, habitat restoration, and wildlife reintegration have all played a major role in bringing populations into the hundreds after near total extinction.
But one other key development has been genetic cloning.
In April [2024], the United States Fish and Wildlife Service announced the cloning of two black-footed ferrets from preserved tissue samples, the second and third ferret clones in history, following the birth of the first clone in December 2020.
Cloning is a tactic to preserve the health of species, as all living black-footed ferrets come from just seven wild-caught descendants. This means their genetic diversity is extremely limited and opens them up to greater risks of disease and genetic abnormalities.
Now, a new breakthrough has been made.
Antonia, a black-footed ferret cloned from the DNA of a ferret that lived in the 1980s has successfully birthed two healthy kits of her own: Sibert and Red Cloud.
These babies mark the first successful live births from a cloned endangered species — and is a milestone for the country’s ferret recovery program.
The kits are now three months old, and mother Antonia is helping to raise them — and expand their gene pool.
In fact, Antonia’s offspring have three times the genetic diversity of any other living ferrets that have come from the original seven ancestors.
Researchers believe that expanded genetic diversity could help grow the ferrets’ population and help prime them to recover from ongoing diseases that have been massively detrimental to the species, including sylvatic plague and canine distemper.
“The successful breeding and subsequent birth of Antonia's kits marks a major milestone in endangered species conservation,” said Paul Marinari, senior curator at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute.
“The many partners in the Black-footed Ferret Recovery Program continue their innovative and inspirational efforts to save this species and be a model for other conservation programs across the globe.”
Antonia actually gave birth to three kits, after mating with Urchin, a 3-year-old male ferret. One of the three kits passed away shortly after birth, but one male and one female are in good health and meeting developmental milestones, according to the Smithsonian.
Mom and babies will remain at the facility for further research, with no plans to release them into the wild.
According to the Colorado Sun, another cloned ferret, Noreen, is also a potential mom in the cloning-breeding program. The original cloned ferret, Elizabeth Ann, is doing well at the recovery program in Colorado, but does not have the capabilities to breed.
Antonia, who was cloned using the DNA of a black-footed ferret named Willa, has now solidified Willa’s place as the eighth founding ancestor of all current living ferrets.
“By doing this, we’ve actually added an eighth founder,” said Tina Jackson, black-footed ferret recovery coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in an interview with the Colorado Sun.
“And in some ways that may not sound like a lot, but in this genetic world, that is huge.”
Along with the USFWS and Smithsonian, conservation organization Revive & Restore has also enabled the use of biotechnologies in conservation practice. Co-founder and executive director Ryan Phelan is thrilled to welcome these two new kits to the black-footed ferret family.
“For the first time, we can definitively say that cloning contributed meaningful genetic variation back into a breeding population,” he said in a statement.
“As these kits move forward in the breeding program, the impact of this work will multiply, building a more robust and resilient population over time.”"
-via GoodGoodGood, November 4, 2024
Remember that one time I lamented that it would be really cool to have a peafowl calculator and that I was struggling to make one because I didn't know anything about coding, and then benevolent coders and artists came out of the woodwork to rescue me.
Well, folks, they didn't just do it, they knocked it outta the damn park. @qwertynerd97 did all the coding, @ospreyonthemoon created the line art, and worked on coloring the sprites with @xayazia and @mothzarellaman. And look at this beast!
We started this project March 15th, 2025, and it was finished and open for beta testing starting April 1st, 2026. A year of coding, arting, and rooting around for references and genetics info. A year of collaboration. A year of work and excitement and watching this thing come together!! I didn't want it to be lost to April Fool's Day, because it's actually real!!
We could use some outside help, though. I'm hoping to get people to come USE it, to click all the buttons and see what happens, to see if anything that SHOULD NOT happen does happen. We found what we hope are the majority of the bugs yesterday, but before I hand it over to breeders who will use it to make decisions about their birds, I'd like to see how it handles more people touching it at once, and see if anyone clicking weird combos can do something accidentally.
If you DO get anything weird, please reblog this to add that info (so others can see what's already been reported, too) or PM me with your browser, a description, and a photo if possible, and I'll put it in the issues notes.
Peafowl Genetics Calculator