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species |
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speciesIn biology, a distinguishable group of organisms that resemble each other or consist of a few distinctive types (as in polymorphism), and that can all interbreed to produce fertile offspring. Examples include lions, Douglas firs, cabbage white butterflies, humans, and sperm whales. Species are the lowest level in the system of biological classification. They are identified by two-part names, for example Homo sapiens for humans. Related species are grouped together in a genus. Within a species there are usually two or more separate populations, which may in time become distinctive enough to be designated subspecies or varieties, and could eventually give rise to new species through speciation. Around 1.4 million species have been identified so far, of which 750,000 are insects, 250,000 are plants, and 41,000 are vertebrates. In tropical regions there are roughly two species for each temperate-zone species. It is estimated that one species becomes extinct every day through habitat destruction.
species
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Biological species concepts through the mid-twentieth century usually included one or more criteria of speciation mechanism. They are known by numerous terms: the morphological species concept, biological species concept, evolutionary species concept, recognition species concept, cohesion species concept, phylogenetic species concept, Greek species concept, tyological species concept, Darwin's species concept, ecological species concept, phenetic species concept, etc. However, applying a biological species concept would reveal potential sympatric sibling species, namely transient killer whales and resident killer whales. |
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