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Pragmatically then, the food bill itself is effectively minimal Isaac Send a noteboard - 19/03/2012 01:50:11 AM
Going with the 13k/yr figure for bulk food, it strikes me that that is essentially pocket change compared to the various other cost involved, many of which would be the same for any creature, regardless of size, fresh out of the theoretical cloning tanks. Second and third generation ones, if we decided to keep them around, would have milk straight from mom and I assume have adapted to the modern microbes, I mean they're only tens of thousands not tens of millions of years out of date. Now that first generation or so, when the nominal food bill is just a fraction of overall costs, isn't a funding issue, people will cheerfully go to the zoo just to see it and cut checks too. But I would bet the draw of a mammoth early on would be sufficient draw to more than offset the diversion of funds. Come for the mammoth, stay for the penguins, etc, not profit for the zoo. We've already got six elephants at the Cleveland Zoo and we're not one of the big ones, and I gather our elephant exhibit brought in a lot of donations compared to normal, I'd imagine a Mammoth would too. I'd be very surprised if the funds raised off the first year of having a young mammoth or even a small herd wouldn't cover the capital to set up a good zoo habitat and the food bill for a decade or more.

I mean let's us be honest, it is a mammal, baby mammals are cute, and guilt can do wonders, 'We killed them off before, surely we mustn't do it again!' and 'please, please, don't let little Wooly die all alone of his kind, sadly neglected' and there's not a news channel or talk show that wouldn't gladly have the critter on looking adorable with the flashing 1-800-SEND-MONEY-NOW sign on the bottom of the screen. Jurassic Park aside, there's very little Frankenstein vibe about this sort of thing for people these days.
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein

King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
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First of all, yes, some zoos do. Secondly, woolly mammoths eat a LOT - 15/03/2012 12:06:47 PM 578 Views
They are still herbivores, they can't be that expensive to feed - 18/03/2012 10:16:22 PM 536 Views
Okay, let me take a look at the numbers. - 19/03/2012 01:13:09 AM 489 Views
Pragmatically then, the food bill itself is effectively minimal - 19/03/2012 01:50:11 AM 500 Views
heh. you're probably right. - 19/03/2012 02:21:14 AM 471 Views
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Yes! All I need now is to miniaturize them. - 23/03/2012 06:23:04 PM 583 Views

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