
CC (cat) - Wikipedia
CC, for "CopyCat" or "Carbon Copy" [1] (December 22, 2001 – March 3, 2020), was a brown tabby and white domestic shorthair and the first cloned pet. [2] She was cloned by scientists at Texas A&M University in conjunction with Genetic Savings & Clone Inc. CC's surrogate mother was a tabby, but her genetic donor, Rainbow, was a calico domestic ...
CC, The First Cloned Cat | Britannica
Dec 22, 2001 · Meet CC, short for Carbon Copy or Copy Cat (depending on who you ask). She was the world’s first cloned pet.
Texas A&M Says Goodbye to CC, World’s First Cloned Cat
Mar 4, 2020 · CC, the world’s first cloned cat, has passed away at the age of 18, after being diagnosed with kidney failure. CC, short for Copy Cat, passed away on March 3 in College Station, the same place where her life began as a result of groundbreaking cloning work done by Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences (CVM) researchers.
World's First Cloned Cat 'CC' Lived 'Long, Normal, Happy Life ...
Mar 4, 2020 · The world's first cloned cat named "Copy Cat" or "CC" for short, has passed away at the age of 18 after veterinarians diagnosed her with kidney failure.
Remembering CC, The Cloned Cat - NPR
Mar 8, 2020 · C.C. the cat has died in Texas at the ripe old age of 18. She was the first cloned pet, genetically identical to her donor but with a friendlier disposition and a differently patterned coat.
Copy Cat: First Cloned Cat Produces 3 Kittens - VMBS News
Dec 13, 2006 · COLLEGE STATION – CC, the world’s first cloned cat, may not have nine lives, but she has produced three kittens whose lives already are unique. CC, short for Copy Cat, was born Dec. 22, 2001 and became the first-ever cloned cat by a team of Texas A&M; University researchers in the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences.
World’s First Cloned Cat Lived to be 18 - Modern Cat
Jun 22, 2021 · T he world’s first cloned cat passed away this spring at 18 years of age in College Station, TX after a long, healthy life. Named Copy Cat, or CC for short, the cat was the first successfully cloned pet with 100 percent genetic identity.