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by pegasus
66 days ago
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> Seems to me, that we divide other animals based on some of the most minor of phenotypic expressions It might seem like that to you, but you'd be wrong. Taxonomy prioritizes genetic distance and reproductive isolation over superficial visual traits that humans happen to find striking. While phenotypic variations like skin color or facial structure are highly visible, they represent a microscopic fraction of the overall genome and do not indicate the deep divergence required to define a new species. And from a genetic standpoint, Homo sapiens is remarkably homogeneous. Two humans from opposite sides of the planet are generally more genetically similar to each other than two chimpanzees from the same patch of forest. Traits like skin color (an adaptation for UV protection) or nose shape (an adaptation for humidity/temperature) are rapid evolutionary adjustments. They change quickly on an evolutionary timescale without requiring a fundamental split in the species' lineage. In contrast to other animals, because humans never stopped breeding with one another, we never had the chance to "drift" far enough apart to become different species. Geographic distance in humans has historically acted as a filter, not a wall. So there's your answer. Because of this unique genetic homogeneity (and not because of some imagined woke censorship), speaking of human subspecies would be scientifically mistaken. |
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Take for example: Icterus gularis [1] vs Icterus galbula [2]
Are you really going to tell me that:
1. They’d refuse to have sex with each other or could not procreate
And:
2. Someone bothered to check if they’re sufficiently distinct genetically?
I suspect these species were deemed “distinct” by early naturalists like Carl Linnaeus or Charles Darwin neither of whom even knew what a gene was.
And to my eye these birds seem a lot closer than an Aboriginal Australian man is to a Norwegian man.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altamira_oriole
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baltimore_oriole