Since one lives in Africa and the other mainly in Indonesia.I think there is some chance you could create a hybrid, but I doubt it would happen in nature.
~~ Paul
Since one lives in Africa and the other mainly in Indonesia.
This is not between primates, but is related to what we are discussing. I took this photo recently in Canberra.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting...044b1d472d.jpg
Different numbers of chromosomes don't necessarily mean hybridization cannot occur, it just usually means the offspring is sterile.
I understand that part. My main question was regarding the fact that at some point the 48 chromosomes permenantly became 46 (at least in the "human" branch). In order for the offspring not to be sterile, both parents would need to already have the fused chromosomes, so that both had 46. Am I correct in assuming that, or am I missing something? It's been 10 years since I've been in a biology class.