BananaSlug: if you're still looking for it, the paper is in
Molecular Ecology,
here.
unless of course there were less species originally and they evolved into other species. if the whale keeps evolving into whales, and cats only evolve into cats, where did the other species that were non existent when the big bang occured come from?
You don't seem to understand what a "species" is. And I'm not talking about the difficulty of defining a species - an informal "folk biological" understanding would be more than enough to see the point here. A "cat" is not a species. A house cat, or a lion, or a clouded leopard, is a species.
If you find the statement that cats only evolve into cats absurd, replace "cats" with "vertebrates". Presumably, you are more used to thinking of cats as vertebrates than, say, cats as lobe-finned fish, but technically, both are equally correct. Things never evolve out of their ancestry. (To be fair, Linnaeus's original system didn't work like that; but Linnaeus knew nothing of evolution.)
Now, it's different with species and genera, for two reasons related to the way we label and define things.
First, species. Imagine a tree of life. Names like "cat", "whale" or "vertebrate" denote
lineages: branches with all the twigs growing off them. A species in the most commonly used sense (see
biological species concept) is NOT a lineage. It is defined by an ability to interbreed. Interbreeding would be a crossing of branches/twigs, so the moment a twig splits off a species, they cease to be the same species by this definition. In short, species DO evolve into other species, but that's an artefact of the way we define species.
As for genera, that's a remnant of the old classification system, and I think it lingers for good practical reasons. For one thing, we don't know most ancestor-descendant relationships down to the genus level due to limitations of the fossil record. Implementing a system where genera must be
monophyletic would also make little difference in practice, as we'd probably keep using just the least inclusive lineages to label an individual species - exactly the way it happens now. You wouldn't call humans
[long list of ancestors] Ardipithecus Australopithecus Homo sapiens because that's clumsy and unnecessary
. You'd just stick with the good old
Homo sapiens.
Your linked article by Jerry James Stone is an example of "A little learning is a dangerous thing," or, corrupt reporting, or most likely, both.
Huh, and I thought the
BBC article on the same was misleading... That one only said that Type 2 whales were more closely related to Antarctic whales than to their own neighbours. The article claims that one of the authors said this, but I find that hard to believe given that the paper quite clearly concludes that cetacean-eating races evolved independently in these regions. Seems like killer whales may be evolving into
more than two species.
Oh well. I guess that only reinforces my long-held opinion of popular science reporting.
Very important you pay attention to that word. What you call 'macroevolution' (a nonsense term in itself) is just evolution (or the other stupid term 'microevolution') over a series of generations. With a tiny difference in each new generation.
Well... or maybe not. No one actually knows for sure
(This book has an interesting chapter on big change - unfortunately, a few pages are missing from the preview)
And please don't call these terms stupid. It makes my little biologist's heart weep. *theatrical sob*
I just read this ridiculous article.
For those who haven't read it, which I assume is everyone because it's useless Darwinist drivel, the article makes the claim that whales with bad teeth are a separate species from whales with good teeth because they have a different diet.
Yeah, the paper in
Molecular Ecology is a bit more sophisticated than that
