Types of birds
Author
Discussion

Brinyan

Original Poster:

495 posts

120 months

Yesterday (19:52)
quotequote all
I was thinking earlier, do birds ever breed between types - sparrow & goldfinch, for instance.
Obviously dogs & cats do, so do birds? As far as I’ve seen, there’s the standard range of birds & not unique mixes of 2 types.

Landlubber

801 posts

76 months

Yesterday (20:12)
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Read up on Darwin.

Sway

34,558 posts

221 months

Yesterday (20:15)
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Brinyan said:
I was thinking earlier, do birds ever breed between types - sparrow & goldfinch, for instance.
Obviously dogs & cats do, so do birds? As far as I ve seen, there s the standard range of birds & not unique mixes of 2 types.
So you're mixing up 'breeds' with 'species'.

Dogs are one species, many breeds. Same with cats. This is due to humans selectively separating traits and bloodlines over a fairly long while. One of the separators between species (not the only one) is whether they can interbreed.

Birds are a group of species. A sparrow and goldfinch can't breed in the same way humans and chimps can't. They're not different variants of the same species.

ATG

23,438 posts

299 months

Yesterday (20:22)
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Fun fact: sprouts, kale, broccoli, cauliflower and normal god-fearing cabbage are all just cultivars of the same single species.

Doofus

33,916 posts

200 months

Yesterday (20:23)
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ATG said:
Fun fact: sprouts, kale, broccoli, cauliflower and normal god-fearing cabbage are all just cultivars of the same single species.
Don't tell me...It's sparrow, isn't it?

isaldiri

24,257 posts

195 months

Yesterday (20:30)
quotequote all
Brinyan said:
I was thinking earlier, do birds ever breed between types - sparrow & goldfinch, for instance.
Obviously dogs & cats do, so do birds? As far as I ve seen, there s the standard range of birds & not unique mixes of 2 types.
Define types - a sparrow and goldfinch are from different family groups nevermind genus so are even more separated from each other so definitely not for those 2.

Within the same species though, you can definitely get different subspecies interbreeding and sometimes if they are very closely related, even between species but that's pretty uncommon in the wild.

Sway said:
....

Birds are a group of species. A sparrow and goldfinch can't breed in the same way humans and chimps can't. They're not different variants of the same species.
If I can be pedantic, birds (avians) are a group of orders that encompass various families of different species....

Edited by isaldiri on Thursday 2nd July 20:35

gareth_r

6,659 posts

264 months

Different falcon species can interbreed.

Also finches, and macaws, and other parrots.

Corvids.

Gulls.

Tits.

Hawks.

Eagles.

Edited by gareth_r on Friday 3rd July 07:47

Oberheim

703 posts

18 months

Recently I saw a Harris Hawk x Common Buzzard hybrid at a bird of prey centre. This cross is known as a ‘Hazzard’. Can’t remember the name they gave it, but I would have named it ‘Eden’.

Sway

34,558 posts

221 months

isaldiri said:
If I can be pedantic, birds (avians) are a group of orders that encompass various families of different species....

Edited by isaldiri on Thursday 2nd July 20:35
You may indeed chap, I was partially deliberately simplifying, but also I couldn't remember all the sequence of order/genera/yadda yadda!

Halmyre

12,445 posts

166 months

Oberheim said:
Recently I saw a Harris Hawk x Common Buzzard hybrid at a bird of prey centre. This cross is known as a Hazzard . Can t remember the name they gave it, but I would have named it Eden .
'Djukov', surely?

Tracklover

85 posts

1 month

Sway said:
So you're mixing up 'breeds' with 'species'.

Dogs are one species, many breeds. Same with cats. This is due to humans selectively separating traits and bloodlines over a fairly long while. One of the separators between species (not the only one) is whether they can interbreed.

Birds are a group of species. A sparrow and goldfinch can't breed in the same way humans and chimps can't. They're not different variants of the same species.
Not quite how it works.

Lions and Tigers and different species. They can breed.

Ditto sheep and goats and many, many others.

Tracklover

85 posts

1 month

Brinyan said:
I was thinking earlier, do birds ever breed between types - sparrow & goldfinch, for instance.
Obviously dogs & cats do, so do birds? As far as I ve seen, there s the standard range of birds & not unique mixes of 2 types.
Yes there is lots of cross species breeding.

Landlubber

801 posts

76 months

Tracklover said:
Brinyan said:
I was thinking earlier, do birds ever breed between types - sparrow & goldfinch, for instance.
Obviously dogs & cats do, so do birds? As far as I ve seen, there s the standard range of birds & not unique mixes of 2 types.
Yes there is lots of cross species breeding.
Especially in Essex.

Oberheim

703 posts

18 months

Halmyre said:
'Djukov', surely?
hehe

Sway

34,558 posts

221 months

Tracklover said:
Sway said:
So you're mixing up 'breeds' with 'species'.

Dogs are one species, many breeds. Same with cats. This is due to humans selectively separating traits and bloodlines over a fairly long while. One of the separators between species (not the only one) is whether they can interbreed.

Birds are a group of species. A sparrow and goldfinch can't breed in the same way humans and chimps can't. They're not different variants of the same species.
Not quite how it works.

Lions and Tigers and different species. They can breed.

Ditto sheep and goats and many, many others.
Yeah, I wasn't clear with my 'not the only separator for a species definition' being whether they can interbreed.

As some species can, lions/tigers in captivity, the whole horses/donkeys/mules/asses thing that always messes with my head, etc.

However, if they can't interbreed (across a population, assuming both parties are fertile) then it does mean they are different species.

otolith

67,280 posts

231 months

As Sway says, it's not the only factor in determining whether two populations are distinct species, but the ability to interbreed and produce fertile offspring is one factor.

Keep in mind that this is humans trying to impose order onto something which is inherently messy. Nature scoffs at your tree diagrams. Speciation (the splitting off of a new species from another) is not a discrete and absolute thing. If you split two populations up and stop them interbreeding, given long enough they will drift far enough apart to be reproductively incompatible with each other, and we'll then call them species, but you may also end up with a situation where there are lots of little populations with restricted gene flow between them, and some of them can hybridise with others and some can't and taxonomists throw their hands up and call it a "species complex".

An example of wild birds - the ruddy duck Oxyura jamaicensis and the white headed duck Oxyura leucocephala are distinct but related species. They can hybridise, and their hybrids are fertile. We killed all the ruddy ducks in Europe, because their interbreeding with the endangered white headed duck threatened to destroy it as a distinct species.

We have the same problem with crucian carp (Carassius carassius) and common goldfish (Carassius auratus) where people chucking their unwanted goldfish in the local pond are genetically destroying populations of crucian carp by interbreeding.

RSTurboPaul

12,974 posts

285 months

Tracklover said:
Sway said:
So you're mixing up 'breeds' with 'species'.

Dogs are one species, many breeds. Same with cats. This is due to humans selectively separating traits and bloodlines over a fairly long while. One of the separators between species (not the only one) is whether they can interbreed.

Birds are a group of species. A sparrow and goldfinch can't breed in the same way humans and chimps can't. They're not different variants of the same species.
Not quite how it works.

Lions and Tigers and different species. They can breed.

Ditto sheep and goats and many, many others.
Wait, what...

Sheep and goats can breed with each other?


isaldiri

24,257 posts

195 months

otolith said:
As Sway says, it's not the only factor in determining whether two populations are distinct species, but the ability to interbreed and produce fertile offspring is one factor.

Keep in mind that this is humans trying to impose order onto something which is inherently messy. Nature scoffs at your tree diagrams. Speciation (the splitting off of a new species from another) is not a discrete and absolute thing. If you split two populations up and stop them interbreeding, given long enough they will drift far enough apart to be reproductively incompatible with each other, and we'll then call them species, but you may also end up with a situation where there are lots of little populations with restricted gene flow between them, and some of them can hybridise with others and some can't and taxonomists throw their hands up and call it a "species complex".

An example of wild birds - the ruddy duck Oxyura jamaicensis and the white headed duck Oxyura leucocephala are distinct but related species. They can hybridise, and their hybrids are fertile. We killed all the ruddy ducks in Europe, because their interbreeding with the endangered white headed duck threatened to destroy it as a distinct species.

We have the same problem with crucian carp (Carassius carassius) and common goldfish (Carassius auratus) where people chucking their unwanted goldfish in the local pond are genetically destroying populations of crucian carp by interbreeding.
interestingly, birds, unlike mammals are much likelier to be able to interbreed between genus (ie one step above species) rather than just species as well.... it can and does happen (very!) rarely for mammals (that don't keel over quickly anyway) but much easier and likely for birds.

Tracklover

85 posts

1 month

RSTurboPaul said:
Wait, what...

Sheep and goats can breed with each other?
Yeah, that's how Geep are made.

Wait till you hear where Zorse come from.

otolith

67,280 posts

231 months

Tracklover said:
Yeah, that's how Geep are made.

Wait till you hear where Zorse come from.