COLLEGE STATION, Texas - The world's first cloned cat just became
a mother - and she even did it without test tubes. Copy Cat, who was cloned by
Texas A&M University researchers in 2001, had three kittens in September.
Mother and kittens are doing well, said Duane Kraemer, an A&M veterinary
medicine professor who helped clone her and has been taking care of her since.
 This photo released by the Texas A&M University's
College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Science shows the three
kittens Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2006, that were born in September to the
world's first cloned cat. Two of the kittens take after their mother,
while the third, left, has a gray coat like his father. [AP]
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"They're cute and we thought people ought to know about
the birth," "But we're hoping it doesn't cause the same frenzy CC did."
CC got worldwide attention after she was cloned at Texas A&M, which has
cloned more species than any institution in the world, including cattle, swine,
goats, horses and a deer.
The father is Smokey, a naturally born tabby who was brought in to mate with
CC. Two of the kittens take after their mother, while the third has a gray coat
like his father.
CC is not the first cloned cat to give birth, Kraemer
said. In New Orleans, two cloned wild African cats successfully mated to produce
kittens.