Wiccan_Child
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Quite a few. Part 5.3 of TalkOrigin's speciation article lists a load of speciation events reported in labs working with D. melanogaster.If fruit fly is so easy to generate new species, then how many fruit fly species have been produced?
A very good question. The fruit fly is so often used for several reasons, as listed on Wikipedia, but primarily because it has a short gestation period, and it just so happens to have a simple genome (just four chromosomes), allowing us to experiment and know exactly what we're doing (compared to, say, the ferns, which has thousands of chromosomes).Why is the fruit fly so easy to make new species, but not other flies?
But the results attained with D. melanogaster aren't unique to it. Don't forget the theory made the prediction, and then we picked one species at random to test it. And we've observed speciation in more than just D. melanogaster.
These questions good questions, but are very easy to answer. There are a host of reasons for why D. melanogaster is used (simple genome, etc), and speciationhas been observed loads of times.If these questions are not answered, then it suggests that the original experiment on the speciation of fruit fly had some problems. The melanogaster A, B, C, ... may not be true species.
And, yes, each one is a new species. There's the wild species of D. melanogaster, and the populations bred in the lab which cannot breed with it - thereby qualifying as a new species.
First, don't confuse common names for actual taxonomic names. English has the word 'fish', yet in biology there's no such thing - 'fish' isn't a taxonomic classification, just like how 'pet' isn't.A species should have a name. So what is the species name of each dog? Why don't they have specified species name?
Second, there is only one species of dog, and several subspecies (or breeds). They're not different species, because they can interbreed.
However, if in the future the Chocolate Labrador breed evolved to such an extent that it couldn't breed with any other dog, then yes, it would be a bona fide new species, worthy of its own name.
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