Quizzes & Puzzles11 mins ago
Creation of a new species?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/5080298.stm
Wikipedia has the definition of a species as:
Groups of actually or potentially interbreeding natural populations which are reproductively isolated from other such groups
My understanding is that this cross is unattractive to mates of either of the parent species but attractive to similar crosses making them potentially isolated reproductively and hence a new species.
So is this definition of a species correct? if not what should the definition be? and is this cross a new species?
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http://sellers.sbc.man.ac.uk/~wis/lectures/hum an-evol/1.html
Funny you should mention Ligers and reproduction. It seems only the male Ligers are infertile.
http://www.lairweb.org.nz/tiger/ligers2.html
The other problem with all these species definitions is that the focus entirely on sexual reproduction.
How does one define the species definition in micro-organisms?
How do you define species of amoebae?
hi Jake
You are quite right, there are problems in finding a suitable definition for a species which encompasses both sexual and asexual reproduction and it may not in-fact be possible to find a definition which is both suitable and practical at the same time The quote from Wikipedia describes the Biological Species Definition (BSD) put forward by Ernst Mayr which obviously relates to sexual reproduction. Mayr developed BSD to replace the morphological view of species which basically looked at visual similarities. While the BSD provides a testable hypothesis for living, sexually reproductive animals it has no use in classifying fossils or asexually reproducing entities such as amoeba. The Evolutionary Species Concept (ESC) was introduced by Simpson:
"An evolutionary species is a lineage (an ancestral-descendant sequence of populations) evolving separately from others and with its own unitary evolutionary role and tendencies."
cont.
In asexual organisms such as amoeba it is particularly difficult to define species and it could be argued that each individual is a species in themselves. For this reason individuals are classified through a combination of factors based on how similar they are genetically and how they behave. But never mind asexual reproduction, how about symbiotic relationships and lateral gene flow. How do we define that in species terms?
I must reiterate that species definition is a contentious area of biology that causes much debate. Given that DNA analysis shows a spectrum of inter-relatedness of all life isn't the definition of distinct species actually an old-fashioned concept?
I hope this helps:
http://www.dhushara.com/book/diversit/extra/en ig/senig.htm
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