Kotatsu
Phthirapterist
I think that you are missing my point. While you gave an example of a specific variant that never reproduces in the way that defined it, I am interested in whether, as a whole, a population divides neatly into a group of phenotypes that always (barring a catastrophic event) reproduces and a group of phenotypes that never reproduces.
Like ants and other social insects, you mean?
I think my example may still qualify. I may just have worded it clumsily, or my slight vagueness (1) may have given you the wrong impression.
The population which has the trait A could in some cases be neatly divided into two phenotypically distinguishable subgroups, A and A*, of which only individuals in subgroup A ma interbreed to get fertile offspring. Matings between the groups may give offspring, but this offspring will never be fertile, and in many cases, it only rarely survive to hatch (or similar).
Is it important that the difference between the subgroups is phenotypical, and if so, why?
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(1) Though I am guessing that any biologists who are reading this may have figured out what I am thinking about, especially if they are familiar with what I usually talk about.
continue to be thrown about, and it still makes mijo mad.