- Joined
- Jun 25, 2004
- Messages
- 398
Sorry i ahve not been able to reply for a while, been in Germany.
Thoth, i agree with you 100%.
WHY are we discussing inbreeding in VERTIBRATES
But if you want to go down that line: Arabian Oryx, black footed Ferret, Hawian goose, , Prezewalskis horse, Round Island Boa, Angolan Python
These are just some of the endangered species which are being bred in captivity from very small populations.
Any of the insular Epicrates and Tropidophus species, Galapagos Marine Iguana (in fact almost anything from the Galapagos). Sumatran Rinocerus the list goes on and on,
Think of any animal which is found on small islands and has no way (like Birds, Actualy you can nclude many of the rail species as these are flightless) of breeding with unrelated specimens then these HAVE TO BE inbred, and we are not just talking the past couple of years since they were first discovred, we are talking the thousands of years these species have been stick on the islands since either the islands were formed or the species became a species its own right.
Back to inverts.
Last year Richard Gallon described a species of spider found on a very small island, cannot remember the name, this species has to be inbred, there is now way (and no other place where this species has been found) this species can breed outside the population on the island.
Now think of the populations of Avic versicolour, all found on islands which are not very big, P. cambridgei an island species whose nearewst relative is P. irminia.
Look at all the species of Cyrtopholis found on Cuba, some of which come from very small areas,
There is already inbreeding in wild populations, where ever geographical barriers isolate populations of any species.
And remember inbreeding is not just the 30 years or so a species might have been kept in captivity, its all the thousands of years they have been living in these isolated populations.
Now then no one yet has posted any links to the scientific proof that inbreeding occurs in theraphosid spiders, so lets widen the range any inverts?
Ray
Thoth, i agree with you 100%.
WHY are we discussing inbreeding in VERTIBRATES
But if you want to go down that line: Arabian Oryx, black footed Ferret, Hawian goose, , Prezewalskis horse, Round Island Boa, Angolan Python
These are just some of the endangered species which are being bred in captivity from very small populations.
Any of the insular Epicrates and Tropidophus species, Galapagos Marine Iguana (in fact almost anything from the Galapagos). Sumatran Rinocerus the list goes on and on,
Think of any animal which is found on small islands and has no way (like Birds, Actualy you can nclude many of the rail species as these are flightless) of breeding with unrelated specimens then these HAVE TO BE inbred, and we are not just talking the past couple of years since they were first discovred, we are talking the thousands of years these species have been stick on the islands since either the islands were formed or the species became a species its own right.
Back to inverts.
Last year Richard Gallon described a species of spider found on a very small island, cannot remember the name, this species has to be inbred, there is now way (and no other place where this species has been found) this species can breed outside the population on the island.
Now think of the populations of Avic versicolour, all found on islands which are not very big, P. cambridgei an island species whose nearewst relative is P. irminia.
Look at all the species of Cyrtopholis found on Cuba, some of which come from very small areas,
There is already inbreeding in wild populations, where ever geographical barriers isolate populations of any species.
And remember inbreeding is not just the 30 years or so a species might have been kept in captivity, its all the thousands of years they have been living in these isolated populations.
Now then no one yet has posted any links to the scientific proof that inbreeding occurs in theraphosid spiders, so lets widen the range any inverts?
Ray