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Denise said:Ok Ok I give up!![]()
Give up? I hadn't figured you for the submissive type...
Denise said:Ok Ok I give up!![]()
Alaric said:I
I also read that the larger noses we have in northern europe, the thick necks and chest size also come from Neanderthal ancestry. Now, if its been definatively proven that there was no mixing...evolution could simply have adopted those characteristics to survive certain conditions (shrugs).
Denise said:leetahs or teetahs, chions and chigers. Stop me!
Denise said:Haven't there been mules that are not sterile?
Denise said:http://animal.discovery.com/convergence/movie/wolf/facts/facts.html
Wolves and dogs are in the same family, however, they are different species. Humans and chimps cannot breed.
BillHoyt said:
Denise,
I think Discovery got this one wrong. Although, to be fair, the classifications may have changed over time and I see a number of sources getting it wrong. Dogs and wolves are the same species. Dogs constitute a separate variety.
Wolves = Canis lupus
Dogs = Canis lupus familiaris
source
Cheers,
Denise said:
Thank you Bill. So, do we really know what a species is then? Neanderthals are supposed to be a different species, but it seems like the term can't even be agreed upon. Saying all hybrids are sterile is wrong, because not all hybrids are sterile. So, I don't think there is any way to know if there is Neanderthal in modern humans. By the way, this isn't directed just at you, but the forum. Some creationists claim that speciation has never been observed, but science can't even agree on definitions of the species can they?
And according to the Pennsylvania Game Commission:If mated with dogs, a female coyote can produce a coyote/dog hybrid called a "coydog." However, this is uncommon due to the unsynchronized breeding cycles of the two species.
And finally, from the New York Dept. of Environmental Conservation:Coydogs were once believed to be found in good numbers in Pennsylvania, especially when our once-expanding coyote population was thought to be having difficulty finding same-species mates. Truth is, most of these so-called coydogs were probably coyotes or feral dogs, since the breeding cycles of dogs and coyotes are not synchronized. Studies have confirmed coyote-dog interbreeding rarely happens.
Coyotes are fascinating creatures. I'm partial to wolves, though.Coyotes and dogs theoretically can interbreed to produce what is called a ‘coydog'. However, these crossbreeds have a reproductive cycle of dogs, not coyotes, and will give birth at times of the year when the pups cannot possibly survive (i.e., January). In addition, there are behavioral differences between dogs and coyotes which prevent crossbreeding from occurring. Coyotes want to mate with other coyotes and not with dogs. Coyotes are actually more likely to prey upon a domestic dog instead of mating with it. It is in this manner that dog genes are prevented from entering the gene pool of true coyotes, maintaining the two separate species. Coydogs occurred at the leading edge of coyote range expansion during the 1950 to early 1970's. The occurrence of a coydog would be an extremely rare event in New York today.
The fact that in this case, the hybrids are sterile probably helps a lot, too.It is in this manner that dog genes are prevented from entering the gene pool of true coyotes, maintaining the two separate species.
Denise said:
Thank you Bill. So, do we really know what a species is then? Neanderthals are supposed to be a different species, but it seems like the term can't even be agreed upon. Saying all hybrids are sterile is wrong, because not all hybrids are sterile. So, I don't think there is any way to know if there is Neanderthal in modern humans. By the way, this isn't directed just at you, but the forum. Some creationists claim that speciation has never been observed, but science can't even agree on definitions of the species can they?
BillHoyt said:
There are differing definitions of species, but mostly for pragmatic reasons.
With asexually reproducing organisms, the definition is a) clear morphological differences or b) 10% difference in genome.
With sexually reproducing organisms, the definition is the lack of ability to interbreed to produce viable offspring.
When talking about Neanderthals, however, we have a problem, because there aren't any to test-mate. There the calls are made based on morphology rather than on the genes.
Cheers
If you go back to the opening post and follow the link, you'll find that studies to date consistently show that we do not share mitochondrial DNA with Neanderthals.Denise said:
How much of Neanderthal DNA do we have? I've heard that we have mitochondrial DNA. I'm not sure how much we would need in able to say for sure, that we could not have interbred. What is morphology? Is that like the DNA tests that amplify the sample like PCR?
What do you mean by viable offspring? Offspring that live, or offspring that can breed? Hasn't there always been examples of offsprings that can breed? Not many, but one here or there?
BillHoyt said:
There are differing definitions of species, but mostly for pragmatic reasons.
hammegk said:
Pragmatic being a better scientific term than "god-of-the-gaps".
The data that we have is clear; evolution does not occur bit-by-bit, rather in quantum jumps. The problem then is how/why do a fertile male-female pair that breed true occur same time/same place and on so many occasions.
Nothing like the religion of "scientism".![]()
hammegk said:
The data that we have is clear; evolution does not occur bit-by-bit, rather in quantum jumps. The problem then is how/why do a fertile male-female pair that breed true occur same time/same place and on so many occasions.
Actually, it seems that there were a number of competing pre-hominids. Then there may have been a selection race, first leaving only Homo Sapiens and Homo Neanderthalis, then finally only Homo Sapiens (Sapiens). One could speculate that our tendency to racism and xenofobia is a relict instinct from such time as there really WERE "not our kind" people.Denise said:
Don't you think it's fascinating to think what life would be like with a competing species? Us humans have been at the top of the food chain for so long. Would the Neanderthals have their own nations? Imagine the UN!
Been reading Jean Auel, have you? Actually we know very little about the mating and family habits of either Cro Magnon or Neanderthal. But we do have indications that Neandertals lived in familiy groups and had a religious culture (burial rituals).Alaric said:I cannot possibly see the problem with neandertals and sapien sapiens mating. Human family and tribal groupings would have adopted them no problem considering most of the differences between the two SEEMED to be behavioural(muscle mass was different so prey would be different). I remember reading about how Neadertal males would not hang around to guard the female after they did the hanky spanky...thus leading to terrible mortality rates. Apparently one of the advantages Homo Sapien um..Sapiens had was that male "stick around"
*snip*
hammegk said:The data that we have is clear; evolution does not
occur bit-by-bit, rather in quantum jumps.