[Taxacom] Orang possibilities
John Grehan
jgrehan at sciencebuff.org
Tue Sep 8 22:12:36 CDT 2009
Extra 2% - not significant at all if its just primitive retention.
John Grehan
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Thorpe [mailto:s.thorpe at auckland.ac.nz]
Sent: Tuesday, September 08, 2009 6:53 PM
To: Steve Manning; John Grehan; TAXACOM at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Subject: RE: [Taxacom] Why Australians are more real than Americans:
implications for taxonomy!
>Can it be falsified? If so, how?
Presumably, it could be shown to be ridiculously improbable, on
molecular grounds, for shared DNA to have independently evolved more
than once. Somewhat like the probability of two unrelated people having
exactly the same fingerprints ("DNA fingerprinting"). Having said that,
though, I haven't had a reply to my question about what the probability
actually is (even roughly) than humans and chimps could share 98% DNA by
chance (relative to the 96%, or whatever it is, shared by Homo and
Pongo). How significant is that extra 2%?
________________________________________
From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
[taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Steve Manning
[sdmanning at asub.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, 9 September 2009 8:50 a.m.
To: John Grehan; TAXACOM at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Why Australians are more real than Americans:
implications for taxonomy!
As a non-expert in the field, I just thought of a third possibility
along with the orangutan and chimp possibilities: Maybe humans evolved
more than once, at least once from an ancestor closer to chimps and at
least one other time from an ancestor closer to orangs. Is that a
possibility either or both sides could live with? Can it be falsified?
If so, how?
How much of human, orang, and chimp diversity has been sampled, both
morphologically with regard to the 28-45 human-orang morphological
synapomorphies alluded to and with regard to DNA human-chimp
synapomorphies? Do any of the well-studied morphological characters
vary between or within human populations? Or between or within chimp or
orang populations for that matter? Same exact questions for the
molecular analyses.
Finally, are there biogeographical correlations with any of the above
variations, morphological or molecular, if any, that have been found
WITHIN humans? WITHIN orangs? or WITHIN chimps?
Steve Manning
At 10:12 PM 9/6/2009, John Grehan wrote:
>I know its always tempting to get a sideways dig in, but its no more
>informative than to say that its "up there with Thorpian denial of the
>evidence that points to the human-orangutan relationship"
>
>John Grehan
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
>[mailto:taxacom-bounces at mailman.nhm.ku.edu] On Behalf Of Stephen Thorpe
>Sent: Sunday, September 06, 2009 5:53 PM
>To: Richard Pyle; TAXACOM at mailman.nhm.ku.edu; 'Jim Croft'
>Subject: Re: [Taxacom] Why Australians are more real than Americans:
>implications for taxonomy!
>
> >So... if I understand you correctly... you're under the
>delusi...err....impression that "real" species boundaries exist in
>nature outside of human imagination and convenience -- correct?
>
>It is manifestly self-evidently so! To deny this is up there with
>Grehanian denial of the evidence that points to the human-chimp
>relationship!
>Importantly, though, I am NOT saying that species boundaries are ALWAYS
>absolutely precise and clear, and indeed, there isn't an absolutely
>precise boundary between Australia and ocean either - the tide goes in
>and out and it is a fuzzy boundary. Nevertheless, Australia does have
>"real" boundaries in nature outside of human imagination and
>convenience
>-- correct?
>
>To see the "real" species boundaries, you only have to imagine a world
>in which there were none. I hope you have the capacity for imagination!
>:) In such a world, every morphotype would grade imperceptibly into
>every other morphotype. Species boundaries would have to be imposed
>completely arbitrarily.
>
>I repeat a previous analogy: there are heavy people and there are light
>people, but it is not a very useful classification because of the
>continuum between them. But if all people of a certain intermediate
>weight class died out, then we could classify people usefully by
weight.
>It would not be a taxonomic classification, but it could be! Imagine a
>world with two extant species of Homo, morphologically identical except
>that one species were 30-60kg, and the other species 70-120kg as
>adults...
>
>Stephen
>
>________________________________________
>From: Richard Pyle [deepreef at bishopmuseum.org]
>Sent: Monday, 7 September 2009 9:36 a.m.
>To: Stephen Thorpe; TAXACOM at mailman.nhm.ku.edu; 'Jim Croft'
>Subject: RE: Why Australians are more real than Americans: implications
>for taxonomy!
>
> > Yes, Richard, species ARE real entities in the world! They might not
> > have existed in a world where there was an unbroken continuum
> > between diverse morphologies, but in our world there are "gaps"
> > which break the biotic realm up into species.
>
>Please... for the sake of us all... don't get me started. :-)
>
>So... if I understand you correctly... you're under the
>delusi...err....impression that "real" species boundaries exist in
>nature outside of human imagination and convenience -- correct?
>
>If so, we are operating under fundamentally different presumptions
>about the nature of biodiversity, so we will never arrive at a mutual
>understanding of what is meant by a "taxon concept circumscription"*.
>
>No sense cluttering the list again with this debate -- there are enough
>iterations of it in the Taxacom archives.
>
>Aloha,
>Rich
>
>*Note: My use of the elaborated term "taxon concept circumscription" is
>to disguish it from "species concept" (in the sense of "biological
>species concept", "phylogenetic species concept", etc.) -- which is an
>equally contentious and very-much related debate, but still quite
>different from the "species are real" debate.
>_______________________________________________
>
>Taxacom Mailing List
>Taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
>http://mailman.nhm.ku.edu/mailman/listinfo/taxacom
>
>The Taxacom archive going back to 1992 may be searched with either of
>these methods:
>
>(1) http://taxacom.markmail.org
>
>Or (2) a Google search specified as:
>site:mailman.nhm.ku.edu/pipermail/taxacom your search terms here
>
>_______________________________________________
>
>Taxacom Mailing List
>Taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
>http://mailman.nhm.ku.edu/mailman/listinfo/taxacom
>
>The Taxacom archive going back to 1992 may be searched with either of
>these methods:
>
>(1) http://taxacom.markmail.org
>
>Or (2) a Google search specified
>as: site:mailman.nhm.ku.edu/pipermail/taxacom your search terms here
_______________________________________________
Taxacom Mailing List
Taxacom at mailman.nhm.ku.edu
http://mailman.nhm.ku.edu/mailman/listinfo/taxacom
The Taxacom archive going back to 1992 may be searched with either of
these methods:
(1) http://taxacom.markmail.org
Or (2) a Google search specified as:
site:mailman.nhm.ku.edu/pipermail/taxacom your search terms here
More information about the Taxacom
mailing list