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Crossing boundaries is a favorite mode. While still in high school, Shapiro worked as an aspiring broadcast journalist for a TV station in Rome, Georgia. In college, she got sidetracked by Mandarin Chinese, geology, Spanish and English literature, then settled on an ecology major. She received her doctorate in evolutionary biology from Oxford in just three years—and still found time to head the university's wine club and host a local radio call-in science show.
Shapiro has traveled the world in search of DNA samples, ancient and otherwise. Most have been a lot harder to find than the dodo bone. In Canada's Yukon Territory, she fell into 800-year-old caribou dung while gathering samples to test; in Kenya, she dodged lions to grab zebra droppings. She's collected woolly mammoth bones from Siberia and bison remains from Alaska. Last summer, she flew to the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius to search for unfossilized dodo bones to compare with the Oxford specimen—to no avail.
Like many of her colleagues, Shapiro parries a lot of questions about cloning; the idea of re-creating an extinct species is just so tantalizing. But there are massive technical challenges scientists have yet to overcome: ancient DNA tends to come in lots of tiny fragments, and without a living animal, there's no way to reconstruct which genes come into play at which stages of the dodo's development. In short: no dodo mama, no dodo baby.
But more important, she questions whether bringing species back into a world where they have no habitat makes sense. "Sure, it's sexy and high profile to talk about cloning extinct species," she says, "but there are many more important contributions that can be made. The danger is people might be lazy and think cloning is the way to solve the extinction problem." Instead, she'll keep trying to find out why some species went extinct in the first place. She hopes her research can help prevent modern species from going the way of the dodo.
Andrew Curry wrote about Romania's painted monasteries in the June issue of Smithsonian. He lives in Berlin.


Comments
Can anyone tell me if the preserved dodo at Strahov monastery in Prague are authentic? Sian
Posted by sian tantrum on November 21,2007 | 05:52AM
Sounds like a fantastic researcher in a great field.
Aren't three year PhD's the norm for europe?
Posted by Rico on September 22,2009 | 07:00PM
What a great article! It is fascinating and certainly peaks my curiosity about the world of ancient DNA. Would like to see a followup article in greater detail on what Ms. Shapiro is doing in the field.
Posted by Marie on October 1,2009 | 10:08AM