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"For example, feral dogs, wolves and coyotes regularly mate and produce 100% viable offspring" citation required. "You could argue that these are not really different species, but they are usually classified as such." you could argue, but i not, me. reproductive compatability means wild type organisms not artificially coerced. there are tiers of incompatability, biochemical, physiological, anatomical, behavioral, geophysical, geographical. incompatability on any of those levels, drives speciation. once again speciation is not about artificial [anthropogenic] induction of reproductive function, it is about wild type incompatability. no you cant argue. but your forgiven for not having the knowledge, and being fed half knowledge out of brevity. evolution is real, speciation is real, saying let it be so, and it will manifest itself, is not real. oh by the way, we are a species of primate, not dust, and rib bones. |
Fascinating. Not sure what gave you the idea I don’t believe in evolution or that I’m somehow promoting biblical creationism? Are you responding to the right comment?
> speciation is not about artificial [anthropogenic] induction of reproductive function, it is about wild type incompatability.
Neither coyotes nor wolves were created by human selection as far as I know. Dogs were. You can take dogs out of the equation if you want.
Coyote/wolf hybrids (coywolves) exist in the wild and challenge your definition. And I am talking about your original comment's definition "speciation is reproductive incompatibility", because I believe you backtracked a bit with the more vague "wild type incompatibility".
Besides, I don’t necessarily disagree that wolves, dogs and coyotes should be seen as the same “species”. I find this obsession with taxonomy completely useless and irrelevant. We all know there are biological clusters and the boundaries are fuzzy, but we can use simplified/imprecise models when communicating because it is more convenient.
> citation required
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coywolf