Reality botany: data ease doubts about plant species.Despite the doubts of some botanists This is a list of botanists who have articles, in alphabetical order by surname. See also the list of botanists by author abbreviation and . A
Animal species can cross boundaries to mate more readily than plants do, says Loren H. Rieseberg of Indiana University Indiana University, main campus at Bloomington; state supported; coeducational; chartered 1820 as a seminary, opened 1824. It became a college in 1828 and a university in 1838. The medical center (run jointly with Purdue Univ. in Bloomington. Among records of plant-and animal-hybridization tests, Rieseberg's team found that 31 percent of attempted plant combinations readily yielded fertile offspring, whereas 61 percent of animal-species crosses did so. "That was a surprise to me," says Rieseberg. His team has been investigating the concept of plant species. Citing, for example, the alleged tendency of plants to hybridize hy·brid·ize intr. & tr.v. hy·brid·ized, hy·brid·iz·ing, hy·brid·iz·es 1. To produce or cause to produce hybrids; crossbreed. 2. , many botanists have concluded that plant species are arbitrary groupings, says Rieseberg. He and his colleagues compiled data from earlier statistical analyses of traits for species in nearly 700 plant species. In the March 23 Nature, the researchers argue that the data divide plants into distinct groups. The idea of a species has changed over the years, says herbarium herbarium, collection of dried and mounted plant specimens used in systematic botany. To preserve their form and color, plants collected in the field are spread flat in sheets of newsprint and dried, usually in a plant press, between blotters or absorbent paper. director Brent Mishler of the University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley is a public research university located in Berkeley, California, United States. Commonly referred to as UC Berkeley, Berkeley and Cal . Before Charles Darwin, people considered each species a basic unit of creation. Darwin's emphasis on how populations gradually change gave the notion of species a more arbitrary quality: Species had whatever boundaries taxonomists chose. The idea of a species as a population of individuals that breed mostly with each other comes from 20th-century, theorists. Rieseberg and his colleagues reviewed 218 studies that have classified organisms by quantifying traits such as stem height or leaf shape and then calculating how similar various populations are. In more than 80 percent of plant and animal genera genera, in taxonomy: see classification. with at least five species studied this way, the species made tidy clusters instead of forming a continuum, Rieseberg and his colleagues report. The clusters argue for species as distinct entities. To see whether members of the numerically derived clusters breed mostly within a cluster, Rieseberg and his colleagues searched for studies of hybridization hybridization /hy·brid·iza·tion/ (hi?brid-i-za´shun) 1. crossbreeding; the act or process of producing hybrids. 2. molecular hybridization 3. . They examined results of more than 1,000 experimental crosses of plants and more than 600 of animals. Ferns had the least successful mating across species boundaries. Birds had the most. John Kress, curator of botany botany, science devoted to the study of plants. Botany, microbiology, and zoology together compose the science of biology. Humanity's earliest concern with plants was with their practical uses, i.e., for fuel, clothing, shelter, and, particularly, food and drugs. at the Smithsonian Institution Smithsonian Institution, research and education center, at Washington, D.C.; founded 1846 under terms of the will of James Smithson of London, who in 1829 bequeathed his fortune to the United States to create an establishment for the "increase and diffusion of in Washington, D.C., says that Rieseberg and his colleagues' study makes progress, but he doubts that it "will put an end to the controversy over species as arbitrary constructs versus objective entities." Mishler calls the group's approach "clever" but argues that plant classification has already moved beyond such issues. The most modern approach to classifying plants, he says, depends on sorting out the family histories of lineages before defining species. |
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