otokage007
Well-Known Member
Or algae.
Since when algae are plants? :/
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
Or algae.
if two plants hybridise and produce fertile offspring, the BSC says they are by definition the same species.It's quite difficult to say when a plant is a different specie from other plant if both can hybridize and produce fertile offspring.
if two plants hybridise and produce fertile offspring, the BSC says they are by definition the same species.
As a rule, the emergence of new plant species following hybridisation has involved the production of a sterile hybrid, the sterility resulting from the two sets of parental chromosomes being too dissimilar to pair and undergo meiosis. Accidental doubling of chromosome number (allopolyploidy) then restores fertility, but isolates the hybrid from either of the parental types, clinching speciation. Examples of this mode of speciation, in both wild and cultivated plants, are numerous and well-documented.
Or algae.
Most algaes are considered part of the plant kingdom.
I've never ever heard such a thing. But ok.
As far as I know.... No algae are part of the plant kingdom.I meant to say most algae aren't part of the plant kingdom. Some typos can be devastating.
Aren't green algae part of the plant kingdom? Or are they protists?
Kinds is a Biblical description. i figured a biblical perpective might be helpful.Most algaes are considered part of the plant kingdom. I'm just curious as to what a biblical listing of plant types is to serve exactly in the discussion. Was that an argument against plant evolution or something? Just seems to be an incomplete list made a long time ago for no real particular reason.
So it's an animal?Since when algae are plants? :/
As far as I know.... No algae are part of the plant kingdom.
wa:do
So it's an animal?
Dang it, why do they have to keep changing things!Red and brown algaes (and some others) are considered protists now-a-days.
Controversially... there is a lot of debate as to where to draw the phylum line dividing plants and green algae. Enough that in most plylogenies/cladograms they are considered the "sister group" to "the plants".Chlorophyta?
This one I will totally grant you. These guys are the most basal of the "plants" and are the group the land plants evolved from.Streptophytina algae?
LoL... if only we stopped trying to figure things out and let well enough alone.Dang it, why do they have to keep changing things!
Plant phylogenetics is really complex, I'm glad I deal with animals who are so much easier.
Dang it, why do they have to keep changing things!
Controversially... there is a lot of debate as to where to draw the phylum line dividing plants and green algae. Enough that in most plylogenies/cladograms they are considered the "sister group" to "the plants".
This one I will totally grant you. These guys are the most basal of the "plants" and are the group the land plants evolved from.
Though they are not considered "true plants" which is exclusive to the ferns, mosses, conifers and flowering plants. :cover:
Plant phylogenetics is really complex, I'm glad I deal with animals who are so much easier.
wa:do
Chemical, genetic and morphological... how important is a cell wall, for example.Yeah well, APG III is still pretty new so there are some chinks to be worked out. I doubt it will be last classification system. We went from "it photosynthesizes, doesn't it" to "well it has chlorophyll a and b in chloroplast, doesn't it?" to... well I don't know yet.
Divisions at the earlier parts are intense because it's basically chemical differences. Guess a line has to be drawn somewhere, but multiple peoples gots the stick!