The development of a somatic cell nuclear transfer procedure for the production of blastocyst stage cattle embryos is described. Bovine fetal fibroblasts were used for fusion experiments with surgically enucleated oocytes (cytoplasts) following the establishment of optimal parameters for electrofusion from isofusion contours. Fusion rates were increased by decreasing size of the cytoplasts used but cleavage was decreased by decreasing size of the cytoplast used (quarter, half and whole cytoplasts). The use of double cytoplasts did not improve cleavage, and development to blastocysts could not be achieved. In a comparison of electrofusion of fibroblasts with cytoplasts in the subzonal perivitelline space with intracytoplasmic injection of nuclei and parthenogenetically activated oocytes, 2%, 14% and 24% developed to blastocysts respectively. In the group injected with isolated nuclei, the passage number (4 to 9) had no apparent influence on developmental competence to blastocysts. The embryos produced by nuclear injection of somatic cell nuclei showed the normal pattern of cell surface appearance of TEC-3 and TEC-4 stage-specific epitopes during development, as seen in fertilized oocytes. We conclude that the nuclear injection of somatic cell nuclei is a relatively efficient way to clone bovine embryos.