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by ncmncm
2443 days ago
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That criterion has had to be abandoned, replaced with "forms reproductive groups with practical boundaries". Sometimes a river is that boundary, or a preferred prey species, a mating strategy, or odor preference. Otherwise, we cannot distinguish bear, dog, or great-cat species. |
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It seems to me that if e.g. American black bears and Asian black bears can interbreed, then we could call them all one species—black bears—and put all their subspecies together in into that taxonomic category. Maybe with some optional taxonomic level between "species" and "subspecies" for describing their phenotypic groupings.
But I see, looking at various sources, that those two types of bears are indeed considered separate species. Why do we do that? What's better/more useful about drawing the species boundary there?