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I read this today in an atricle about splitting up the genus Scilla to make more sense of it. QuoteFinally, what is left of Scilla includes species such as S. bifolia as wellas the now defunct genus Chionodoxa (which itself forms 2 unrelated groups).It does make sense of the whole fertile intergeneric hybrid thing with Scilla and Chionodoxa. I'm not normally a splitter by the way.See http://lists.ibiblio.org/pipermail/pbs/2003-December/016258.html
Finally, what is left of Scilla includes species such as S. bifolia as wellas the now defunct genus Chionodoxa (which itself forms 2 unrelated groups).
Simon, some of us take it a step further and say that the ability of nominal species to "hybridize" is proof that the entities in question actually make up one morphologically variable species.
Quote from: Jim McKenney on March 24, 2009, 10:27:12 PMSimon, some of us take it a step further and say that the ability of nominal species to "hybridize" is proof that the entities in question actually make up one morphologically variable species. Jim,That would make big chunks of orchidaceae into one species. A surprising number of orchids are able to interbreed.Göte
Simon, some of us take it a step further and say that the ability of nominal species to "hybridize" is proof that the entities in question actually make up one morphologically variable species. Traditional taxonomy was based on morphology. The traditional view was, more or less, if two things looked alike, they were members of the same species. But that point of view got it backwards: if two organisms look alike, the likely explanation is that they share the same gene pool. In other words, they are not members of the same species because they look alike, it's rather that they look alike because they are members of the same species and share the same gene pool.
Quote from: Jim McKenney on March 24, 2009, 10:27:12 PMSimon, some of us take it a step further and say that the ability of nominal species to "hybridize" is proof that the entities in question actually make up one morphologically variable species. Traditional taxonomy was based on morphology. The traditional view was, more or less, if two things looked alike, they were members of the same species. But that point of view got it backwards: if two organisms look alike, the likely explanation is that they share the same gene pool. In other words, they are not members of the same species because they look alike, it's rather that they look alike because they are members of the same species and share the same gene pool. Jim - chicken & egg. In the case of animals, two organisms share, or contribute to, the same gene pool either because they 'look alike' (to each other) or are in some way mutually recognizable. In the case of plants, they are 'mutually recognizable' in the sense of being morphologically or physiologically compatible. The so-called 'Biological' concept of species has as many problems as the older morphological concept.
Gerry, when you say "The so-called 'Biological' concept of species has as many problems as the older morphological concept" , isn't it true that the "problems" are largely of a utilitarian nature? What I mean is that people in general expect species concept to be useful in some way, not simply a reflection of what is happening in nature. And as for "chicken & egg": you must not be a zoölogist. Zoölogy answered this one long ago. The egg definitely came first. Chickens lay what is known as a cleidoic egg. The cleidoic egg evolved in the reptilian ancestors of chickens - it was around long before there were chickens.
The answer I guess is in the DNA somewhere.
Quote from: Sinchets on March 26, 2009, 02:07:58 PM The answer I guess is in the DNA somewhere.Maybe, but maybe not.Each generation of scientists has seized on new advances in technology and applied these to the question of species. These new technologies typically provide insight, usually the sort of insight which allows us to say "A and B are not the same species". But no technology that I'm aware of allows us to say, purely on the basis of morphology, that A and B are the same species. Conspecificity is a function, a relationship, not a structure. It is tempting to infer function from morphology, but it's very difficult if not impossible to prove it purely from morphology.I'm willing to bet that when the dust settles, current DNA studies will prove to be another example of this. DNA studies after all are a much more finely granular morphology - really a sort of meta-morphology. Is there really any reason to think that DNA studies, to the extent that they are ultra-refined morphological studies, will provide the answer to what is essentially not a question of morphology? My apologies to all who have read this far and are wondering what any of this has to do with Scilla.
Quote from: Jim McKenney on March 26, 2009, 02:51:34 PMQuote from: Sinchets on March 26, 2009, 02:07:58 PM The answer I guess is in the DNA somewhere.Maybe, but maybe not.Each generation of scientists has seized on new advances in technology and applied these to the question of species. These new technologies typically provide insight, usually the sort of insight which allows us to say "A and B are not the same species". But no technology that I'm aware of allows us to say, purely on the basis of morphology, that A and B are the same species. Conspecificity is a function, a relationship, not a structure. It is tempting to infer function from morphology, but it's very difficult if not impossible to prove it purely from morphology.I'm willing to bet that when the dust settles, current DNA studies will prove to be another example of this. DNA studies after all are a much more finely granular morphology - really a sort of meta-morphology. Is there really any reason to think that DNA studies, to the extent that they are ultra-refined morphological studies, will provide the answer to what is essentially not a question of morphology? My apologies to all who have read this far and are wondering what any of this has to do with Scilla.Jim - I wonder whether you are between Scylla & Charybdis? Yes, I agree that DNA analysis is a technologically advanced version of traditional morphological analysis. Its limitations remain to be seen, though classical genetics suggests there will be some problems about relating it to gross morphology. I don't really understand what you mean by "conspecificity is a function", unless you are referring to the 'biological' concept & the central importance there of the ability of two individuals to interbreed. The traditional, morphological concept of species - where a species is a class - is empirically untenable but there is nothing incoherent or logically flawed about it. To speak of two individuals being morphologically similar is to speak of a relationship. Similarity is a relationship & classes are constructed on the basis of similarity or sameness in particular respects.
Since we both agree that the the morphological concept of species is empirically untenable, I see no purpose in this argument in celebrating the logical validity of its structure or application. But please don't misunderstand me: in other contexts an understanding of those things can be important, if only because they help us understand the work of those who have worked from the viewpoint of the traditional morphological concept of species.
Since the 'biological' concept has a multitude of problems all it's own, some alternative concept is required if we are to retain a notion of species as real entities.