20 SEP 2011 by ideonexus
Taxonomies are Not Arbitrary, but Factual
Mayr lived exactly 100 years, producing a stream of books and papers
up to the day of his death. Among these was his 1963 classic, Animal
Species and Evolution, the very book that made me want to study evolution.
In it Mayr recounted a striking fact. When he totaled up the names
that the natives of New Guinea’s Arfak Mountains applied to local birds,
he found that they recognized 136 different types. Western zoologists,
using traditional methods of taxonomy, recognized 137 species. In other...Example of the natives of an island having nearly the same number of classifications of birds as the taxonomists who studies the species.
20 MAY 2011 by ideonexus
There Are Many Types of Islands
IMAGINE a world without islands.
Biologists often use the word 'island' to mean something other than just a piece of land
surrounded by water. From the point of view of a freshwater fish, a lake is an island: an island of
habitable water surrounded by inhospitable land. From the point of view of an Alpine beetle, incapable of flourishing below a certain altitude, each high peak is an island, with almost
impassable valleys between. There are tiny nematode worms (related to the elegant Caenorh...Creating many ways for species to evolve divergently.