originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Cultivar is, obviously, coherent as a subcategory of variety. I am not wildly in favor of it, though, not for grammatical reasons but because it promotes the fallacy that humanly caused natural selection is, somehow, a different process. As the biology professor with whom I taught a Darwin course used to say, natural selection doesn't change just because human beings are somewhere in the vicinity.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
Cultivar is, obviously, coherent as a subcategory of variety. I am not wildly in favor of it, though, not for grammatical reasons but because it promotes the fallacy that humanly caused natural selection is, somehow, a different process. As the biology professor with whom I taught a Darwin course used to say, natural selection doesn't change just because human beings are somewhere in the vicinity.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
See Mark e, above, for the very usual claim that human intervention is somehow not natural selection because human beings do it, as if human beings aren't just animals like all the other fauna in the world. If an antelope developed more speed to escape the lion hunting it as a direct result of being hunted, would you not describe that as natural selection? But if the grape develops a quality sought by its human breeder so that it will be bred rather than a grape without that quality, is that something different? It's worth remembering that the first chapter in Origin of Species is on human breeding.
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Ah, the sounds of the babble of pedantry! So refreshing!
Here's my toot-toot:
- A vine that is reproduced asexually (e.g., grafting) produces offspring that are genetically identical to the parent and are therefore called clones.
- A vine that almost always reproduces true from seed is a variety.
- A vine that almost never reproduces true from seed (and, therefore, continues to exist only through the benevolent intervention of The Politburo horticulturists) is a cultivar.
GMOs may fall into any category, depending on exactly what was inserted.
I shall spare you any discussion of cultigen.
originally posted by BJ:
Can we simplify? A cultivar is cultivated. A variety is a distinct subsubspecies created by natural selection. Right? Or...???
I really have no idea what I'm talking about. This is WAY outside of my area of expertise. However, I've found that has never stopped me in the past.
originally posted by BJ:
Can we simplify? A cultivar is cultivated. A variety is a distinct subsubspecies created by natural selection. Right? Or...???
I really have no idea what I'm talking about. This is WAY outside of my area of expertise. However, I've found that has never stopped me in the past.
originally posted by MLipton:
To call human breeding natural selection may be technically correct but to me it’s a bit of a semantic dodge. Natural selection as typically formulated results from environmental factors such as predation, food shortages and changing climate. Breeding implies the selection for particular traits regardless of their utility. Michael Pollan points out that modern corn can’t propagate without human intervention. That’s hard to rationalize as a product of natural selection as usually thought of.
Mark Lipton
Wouldn’t “breed” be the animal equivalent, connoting the same human intervention? And for the record, I agree with you Jonathan, that nothing here falls out of the realm of “natural selection”.originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by BJ:
Can we simplify? A cultivar is cultivated. A variety is a distinct subsubspecies created by natural selection. Right? Or...???
I really have no idea what I'm talking about. This is WAY outside of my area of expertise. However, I've found that has never stopped me in the past.
And so we start around again. As per Brian's definition below, a cultivar is a subset of a variety. All varieties come into existence through natural selection. In the case of cultivar's the natural force is human action. One further quibble, though. This term seems only to be used with regard to flora. By any reasonable description, most of the canine varieties that we do not call mongrels, would be cultivars if the term applied to flora. I do think this asymmetry in the use of the term tells us about how we are thinking about it. But since Brian objects to that claim, and I can hardly prove it, if he wants it, I'll let him have the last word and end the circle.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
I don't have a position, but if humans are to be understood as part & parcel of natural selection, what would qualify as not natural selection? Breeding by aliens?