
Good subject , good answers and lots to ponder .
location 4
Nrg800 wrote:Well, while we're asking difficult (off topic) questions... Why is it that interbreeding between human 'races' has no adverse affects. I know we are all Homo sapien sapiens, but, like. We split 50,000 years (2,500 generations) ago, and yet. Well, honestly, not only are inter-racial people completely free of haldane's rule, they are also (in my opinion) quite attractive... As good as Biology is, it has quite a few difficult questions!
Thanks
~Nathan
Interbreeding between human races is analagous to putting pied zebs to fawn zebs: we wouldn't expect any adverse effect from that pairing. Now interbreeding between human species , that's a little more interesting. We have good evidence of neanderthal DNA in the modern human genome. It is still a subject of passionate debate, but it seems that H. sapiens and H. neanderthalis are distinct species and that they interbred fairly frequently, though the circumstances in which they did so remain a matter of rank speculation. Haldane's rule may have applied to this hybrid pairing.Nrg800 wrote:Well, while we're asking difficult (off topic) questions... Why is it that interbreeding between human 'races' has no adverse affects. I know we are all Homo sapien sapiens, but, like. We split 50,000 years (2,500 generations) ago, and yet.
Well, Nathan, that's outside my area of expertise. However, I can say that breeding out improves vigour, and that breeding in tends to accumulate deleterious mutations.Nrg800 wrote:Well, honestly, not only are inter-racial people completely free of haldane's rule, they are also (in my opinion) quite attractive...
MadHatter wrote:To come back to the subject of gouldians and the apparent conflict between the experimental results of Ms. Pryke and the anecdotal experience of breeders, it seems to me that there may be a simple explanation. It stands to reason that Ms. Pryke's experimental colony was most likely sourced from wild birds and is probably only a comparitively few generations removed from the wild founders, whereas our domestic stock must be many more generations removed from the original wild-caught founders, and we have been indiscriminately breeding the different head colours to one-another for a great many generations. (N.B. the word 'indiscriminately' is not intended perjoratively in this context)
It seems entirely plausible to me that we may have inadvertently bred out the incompatible alleles from our domestic strains.
If that is the case, then we may prove to have unwittingly altered the domestic bird far more than we had ever realised.