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New Species

Posted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 4:16 pm
by markhows

Re: New Species

Posted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 4:42 pm
by Pete Eeles
Yes - and I wouldn't be surprised if other species turn up as a result of advanced techniques being applied. Although I'm still irked by the definition of "species" and what it really means :)

Cheers,

- Pete

Re: New Species

Posted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 4:50 pm
by Pete Eeles
More detailed info here:

http://www.butterflyconservation.ie/wordpress/?p=805

"Cryptic Wood White" seems to be the recommended vernacular name, and the "juvernica" subspecies of Wood White would appear to be removed.

Cheers,

- Pete

Re: New Species

Posted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 5:00 pm
by Pete Eeles
"L.reali occurs in Northern Spain but none of the Irish specimens were identified as reali and taken together with the report’s analysis of ancestry the existence of reali here appears unlikely. It is likely that reali will be replaced on the Irish list by juvernica.".

So - Cryptic Wood White would replace Real's Wood White on the British list!

Cheers,

- Pete

Re: New Species

Posted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 5:12 pm
by Pete Eeles

Re: New Species

Posted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 6:54 pm
by Neil Jones
Pete Eeles wrote:Paper here:

http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pd ... 11-109.pdf

Cheers,

- Pete
Actually that isn't the paper concerned.
This is
http://www.nature.com/ncomms/journal/v2 ... #/abstract

Re: New Species

Posted: Wed Jul 13, 2011 8:15 pm
by Pete Eeles
Thanks Neil - shame you have to fork out $$ to get hold of a copy :(

Cheers,

- Pete

Re: New Species

Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2011 11:56 pm
by Dave McCormick
Great we are making new discoveries, hopefully this one will turn our right, often have we had scientists trying to make "find" new species in others, some did try and say that the two forms of burnished brass were separate species.