Many plants have simply refused to read the bio text book and don't know they are not supposed to have viable offspring with other species or genera. Its thorn in the taxonomists foot. But what can you do? Go by morphology. In nature, would the plants
A) be able to pollinate one another successfully via wind or other type of pollinator? Are they found in the same region, geographically, or in the same climate?
B)be able to produce offspring?
C)be able to produce offspring that are viable? In other words, would the offspring find a suitable mate or pollinator?
Dogs are found all over the world today. But what would happen if humans were to suddenly dissappear?
With the considerable geographic Isolation that dogs would experience, some being on Islands, others in each content, then after a few 100 thousand years or so, assuming they survive a humanless world, I would expect them all to evolve into different species.
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"We must not look at goblin men,
We must not buy their fruits:
Who knows upon what soil they fed
Their hungry thirsty roots?"
Goblin Market
by Christina Georgina Rossetti
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