I don’t know about animals but I don’t see what would be the piont of this except to show that it can be done.
Personally, as a farmer myself who makes heavy use of artificial insemination in addition to natural matings, I would say from a genetic progress standpoint, cloning is a dead end. An animal which is not an improvement over its dam (which is what a clone is) is lost time. In my field, my animals have to be constantly improving over successive generations and cloning does not afford that progress. It is of much more value to select proven herd sires from nationally ranked sire summaries and use them heavily through artificial insemination.
However it is not presently very economical. Just having an embryo transfer performed as a result of a purely natural breeding is currently very expensive, although in many cases, depending on the genetic makeup of the progeny involved, it can certainly be worth the expense. Many inferior female animals can carry the progeny of animals of higher quality by serving as an incubator during gestation. Embryo transplants allow one to make use of animals which are not themselves suitable for selecting progeny from since they are able to carry genetically superior offspring from genetically superior donors.
The cloning procedure adds another large expense on top of the already expensive embryo transfer procedure. The result is a high proliferation of a concentrated genetic makeup in a small selective group. This is not desirable from a herd improvement standpoint. Selective line breeding allows much more rapid results.
As a dairy farmer, I have been involved in all types of breeding. From semen collection and freezing in nitrogen, artificial insemination of females, embryo transplants from donor female to receptive females, selective breeding by the natural method, culling and/or slaughter of unfit animals. I haven’t been involved in cloning and don’t have much desire to do so, since it is a genetic dead end, on top of having no cost benefit. The purpose behind any breeding system is to produce offspring which are genetically superior to their parents. Cloning maintains the status quo with no improvement in successive generations. It also requires the use of embryo transplants in which the high cost is seldom worth pursuing even after initial natural breedings. Any farm animal which you will ever see is the product of ages upon ages of careful breeding and careful selection.
None of this immoral as animals are not made in the image and likeness of God and do not have everlasting life.
It is no more immoral to artificially breed an animal than it is to slaughter an ‘unfit’ animal for food or to purposely raise animals for slaughter.
The cloning of human beings however, is not only an intrinsic evil, but the procedure itself is compromised of many intrinsically evil acts and therefore is condemned by the Church.
Can you imagine having to compete against Man O’ War or Secretariat? Forever?
I wouldn’t mind, since a good breeding program aims to surpass these animals, not maintain the red line.