Barbie Girl;
LOL!!!!
Why don't you tell me a Little more about that O. lamarckiana fruit Fly.
Since you decided to Cite a Paper about a Plant instead, Why don't you cite the Actual Information about the O. Lamarckiana Fruit Fly, and Not the O. Lamarckiana Plant.
=M=
Oh, I found your Fruit Fly!!!! Here;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oenothera
From Plant Article;
In 1905, while studying the genetics of Oenothera lamarckiana, Hugo de Vries discovered a variant with a chromosome number of 2n = 28 compared with 2n = 24 for O. lamarckiana. DeVries was unable to breed this variant with O. lamarckiana. He named the variant Oenothera gigas.[16]
Barbie!!! How did you Confuse a Plant for a Fruit Fly?
========================================
All Nineteen of the Species of Salamanders around that Horse Shoe in Cali can Interbreed, just Two of the Species are Kept from Multiplying, because the Environment is Keeping them apart, which is the Definition of, "Incipient speciation", which just means;
See the First Part of this Article;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incipient_speciation
Which is what happened with those Salamanders, which you said Changed to A Different Kind of Animal. Even though they all Are Still Salamanders, given they can All Interbreed.
See Here;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ensatina
From this Salamander article;
The Ensatina salamander has been described as a ring species in the mountains surrounding the Californian Central Valley.[2] The complex forms a horseshoe shape around the mountains, and though interbreeding can happen between each of the 19 populations around the horseshoe, the Ensatina eschscholtzii subspecies on the western end of the horseshoe cannot interbreed with the Ensatina klauberi on the eastern end.[4] As such it is thought to be an example of Incipient Speciation, and provides an illustration of "nearly all stages in a speciation process" (Dobzhansky,1958).[2][5] Richard Highton argued Ensatina is a case of multiple species and not a continuum of one species (meaning, by traditional definitions it is not a ring species)[6]
They are All the Same Species. Given they can All interbreed.
LOL!!!!
Why don't you tell me a Little more about that O. lamarckiana fruit Fly.
Since you decided to Cite a Paper about a Plant instead, Why don't you cite the Actual Information about the O. Lamarckiana Fruit Fly, and Not the O. Lamarckiana Plant.
=M=
Oh, I found your Fruit Fly!!!! Here;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oenothera
From Plant Article;
In 1905, while studying the genetics of Oenothera lamarckiana, Hugo de Vries discovered a variant with a chromosome number of 2n = 28 compared with 2n = 24 for O. lamarckiana. DeVries was unable to breed this variant with O. lamarckiana. He named the variant Oenothera gigas.[16]
Barbie!!! How did you Confuse a Plant for a Fruit Fly?
========================================
All Nineteen of the Species of Salamanders around that Horse Shoe in Cali can Interbreed, just Two of the Species are Kept from Multiplying, because the Environment is Keeping them apart, which is the Definition of, "Incipient speciation", which just means;
See the First Part of this Article;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incipient_speciation
Which is what happened with those Salamanders, which you said Changed to A Different Kind of Animal. Even though they all Are Still Salamanders, given they can All Interbreed.
See Here;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ensatina
From this Salamander article;
The Ensatina salamander has been described as a ring species in the mountains surrounding the Californian Central Valley.[2] The complex forms a horseshoe shape around the mountains, and though interbreeding can happen between each of the 19 populations around the horseshoe, the Ensatina eschscholtzii subspecies on the western end of the horseshoe cannot interbreed with the Ensatina klauberi on the eastern end.[4] As such it is thought to be an example of Incipient Speciation, and provides an illustration of "nearly all stages in a speciation process" (Dobzhansky,1958).[2][5] Richard Highton argued Ensatina is a case of multiple species and not a continuum of one species (meaning, by traditional definitions it is not a ring species)[6]
They are All the Same Species. Given they can All interbreed.
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