Will all extant mammal species have their genome sequenced and assembled by 2035?
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Limiting to only known extant mammal species as of the posting of this question. Ignoring species that are considered potentially extinct by then, and proposed subspecies/other complications with the concept of species. Any genome assembly quality, method, and sequencing technology accepted, as long as the BUSCO score (or anything better establishing itself by then) is above 90%.
This question is managed and resolved by Manifold.
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@AsptheWyvern Good point. But true new discoveries of species is very rare in mammals, most of the new descriptions take the shape of "this subpopulation is actually its own species". I will edit the question to "all known extant mammal species as of the posting of this question".
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