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  • Hey guys Julia here for DNews

  • The tree of life is HUGE. HUGE. According to a draft described in the journal Proceedings

  • of the National Academy of Sciences. The latest draft of the great tree named over 2.3 million

  • species of animals, plants, fungi, and bacteria. Previous versions of the tree of life only

  • charted about 100,000 species. But this new HUGE tree is truly an awesome sight to behold.

  • To get a close up look at the whole thing check out https://tree.opentreeoflife.org.

  • There’s a link in the description.

  • But that got me wondering, with millions and millions of species on this planet. How do

  • we tell them apart?

  • Evolution is a beautiful thing. The branches of life spread out in every direction as life

  • finds a way into every niche imaginable. A new species arises in a process called speciation.

  • It’s when something happens to separate it from all that came before, like a new trait

  • or geological isolation.

  • Naturalists like Charles Darwin used to tell species apart the old fashioned way. Just

  • by lookinat em, which is called morphology. It’s telling species apart by their appearance.

  • But there’s another way to define a species, biologically. I’ve often heard a species

  • defined as animals that can reproduce and make a viable, fertile offspring. Basically

  • if two animals can make a baby that lives and can later make it’s own baby, then those

  • two animals are the same species.

  • Which is basically what the Biological Species Concept (BSC) says. This concept was introduced

  • by biologist Ernst Mayr in the mid-20th century as "species are groups of interbreeding natural

  • populations that are reproductively isolated from other such groups."

  • But both of these definitions aren’t perfect. Life finds a way. So sometimes creatures that

  • look wildly different can breed. Like take dog breeds for example. If you were an alien

  • taxonomist coming to Earth for the first time, you might be very confused by how all these

  • creatures, from the smallest to chihuahua to the greatest Dane could possibly be the

  • same breed.

  • On the other hand a group of animals that look an awful lot alike can actually be different

  • species. In some cases different species evolved similar traits because theyre in similar

  • environments like Fossas and cats, which cannot reproduce. Or different species might be closely

  • related and look a lot alike but can’t produce fertile offspring. Like horses and donkeys.

  • Sure they can produce a hybrid called a mule, but theyre sterile.

  • But even on a finer level, sometimes scientists get a surprise and find that different species

  • might not be so different after all. And that’s just the trouble a group of scientists in

  • Australia ran into. In a study published in the journal Biology Letters researchers found

  • that different species of Rock-Wallabys were swapping DNA!

  • Six different species of rockwallaby were thought to be separate species because the

  • way their genetic material package would stop an offspring from being fertile. But upon

  • genetic analysis the researchers found gene flow between the species, suggesting something

  • else was going on, forcing them to rethink their evolution. This finding suggests that

  • these animals were getting it on, making babies that could make some more babies. The rock-wallabies

  • might not bereproductively isolated”, possibly meaning they were more like a single

  • species than previously thought.

  • Like in the case of these rock-wallabies scientists could see a specieshistory written in

  • its DNA. Thanks to modern technology, molecular genetic sequencing changed the game in biology.

  • By comparing the DNA of different animals, scientists can see how theyre related or

  • not. This was a huge advance in the field of taxonomy. It’s how we know our closest

  • cousins are chimps and bonobos, if we went by morphology alone, perhaps we’d think

  • orangutans were our next of kin.

  • According to a study published in the Journal of Biogeography we share more physical features

  • with orangutans, like beards on men and similar shoulder blades. But molecular genetics revealed

  • we share only 97% of our DNA with them and 99% with chimps and bonobos.

  • So it can help us not just learn about the rest of world, but taxonomy helps us find

  • our place in the animal kingdom too. Some people think taxonomy and naming species is

  • dumb, because it does seem somewhat arbitrary. I mean humans are the ones deciding where

  • those lines between species are. But I think it’s really important. Because humans need

  • to categorize things to make sense of this crazy, chaotic world. and it’s so important

  • to keep track of all the diversity of life on this planet, while it’s still here. There’s

  • a real risk were losing species before we can even find them. So no, taxonomy isn’t

  • perfect. But it’s the best weve got.

  • Taxonomy helps us know our history, like when recently scientists announced the discovery

  • of yet another human-like ancestor. So Julian asked the question, how do we determine if

  • they belong to the genus homo in this great episode right here.

  • Alright friends, if you haven’t heard the news yet, WERE DOING A LIVE SHOW. RIGHT

  • HERE IN SAN FRANCISCO! I’M SO EXCITED! Weve got a great line up of all your favorite hosts.

  • I’ll be there, trace will be there Julian, Amy and Crystal will be there and so so many

  • more special guests like Dr. Joe Hanson from It’s Okay to Be Smart and Brian Brushwood,

  • magician, TV personality, host of Scam School, Anthropologist Natalia Reagan, and Dr. Carin

  • Bondar, Discovery Channel host and TED presenter.

  • It’s all going down October 22. So grab your tickets before theyre gone. there’s

  • a link in the description.

Hey guys Julia here for DNews

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