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To: Junior

That was great. I was wondering earlier in the thread, how we got species that remained--which supposedly had evolved. I.e., how come we still have monkeys, if they evolved into the hominids? Phylogenetic branching occurred to me, but of course not the elegant terminology.


80 posted on 02/12/2005 1:21:22 PM PST by pharmamom (Ping me, Baby.)
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To: pharmamom
That was great. I was wondering earlier in the thread, how we got species that remained--which supposedly had evolved. I.e., how come we still have monkeys, if they evolved into the hominids? Phylogenetic branching occurred to me, but of course not the elegant terminology.

Branching, yes. As a species population grows, portions of it become isolated from other portions (through distance, intervening geography, etc.), and the lack of interbreeding allows each subpopulation to evolve off in its own direction, resulting in two or more different species where once there was only one.

This is no different than how we ended up with dozens of new breeds of dogs, from a much less diverse original stock -- different descendant lineages went their separate ways. The entire dog population didn't have to change together in only one way. Likewise for how we now have hundreds of varieties of roses, while the wild rose still continues to exist.

81 posted on 02/12/2005 1:46:45 PM PST by Ichneumon
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