Keep in mind it is generally frowned upon to do such experiments.Thank you.Yes I have read a lot about it(hybrids and interbreeding).In the wild there is more interbreeding than we think(thats what I have heard from biologists) and it is not that unusual.The only problem would be to make them(2 differents subspecies) meet and mate as they are not supposed to live together in the exact same inhabitat.
Yes nymphs from interbreeding may be weak but some of them should be viable.
I will try these days and keep you informed.
It is an interesting question that does not get discussed much. There is only one species of Popa (Popa spurca)(so the offspring will be fertile etc) and you are talking of breeding geographically distinct lines of the same species that would not naturally come into contact.The only problem would be to make them(2 differents subspecies) meet and mate as they are not supposed to live together in the exact same inhabitat.
Not entirely true... Especially with lepidopterans, some coleoptera(Lucanidae comes to mind immediately), and other groups where subspecies are exceedingly common. There are subspecies based upon things such as behavioral differences, host plant choice, distribution, coloration, etc and just because a subspecies is described does not mean that it will be held to be valid. Other entomologists have to hold others work to be valid for it to actually matter, unless there are significant reasons for not learning of the animal's ecology(limited specimens, cryptic behavior, unknown habitat) most works that attempt to describe species or subspecies will not be accepted or will be considered to be dubious until that information is known.It also exists entirely in the imagination of the systematist that named it. Some systematists are "lumpers" and will describe few if ay subspecies, "Splitters" will base a subspecies on the slightest difference. These "scientists" may never see a live specimen of the species that thy name and know nothing of its ecology, but that is a rant for another day. Note, though, that while mammalian subspecies are common, insect subspecies are rare.
If you cross two different "races" of the same species well...you just bred a species? If they are of different and established "lines" then they should be marked as a crossing of lines, not that hard, not a doomsday scenario, not a problem. Please stop your intentionally obtuse behavior.If you cross two different races (different IGM numbers) of P. spurca, or if you successfully cross breed P. spurca and what you believe to be P. undulata (much more difficult and unlikely), you will simply confuse the situation further. Why would you want to produce this freak? What will you call it? Do you feel competent, by scientific training, to call it anything at all?
Hybrid zones in nature, aka intergrade zones, may simply have not been sampled as the "scientists"(entomologists) you were talking about earlier typically try to avoid them when describing a species but still do their due diligence and mention that such zones to exist. IF hybrids created in captivity that suffer from a lack of fitness should be culled, this is obvious, but healthy individuals should be backcrossed to its siblings or one of the original strains in an attempt to stabilize it. Again, no doomsday scenario and only a small amount of responsibility is needed. I highly doubt ANY scientist of any kind would recommend the destruction of hybrids because they are hybrids, in fact they would encourage you to write a scientific paper on the matter, anyone with doubts I am happy to find my Latrodectus and Saturniid hybrid experiment papers where in at least one the author encourages others to attempt hybrids and document them. A scientist may discourage you from releasing such hybrids into the environment, but that should be done with ANY captive invertebrate to reduce the chances of introducing new pests and parasites to the ecosystem.but clearly, the offspring of such hybrids do not flourish, or hybrid mantids would be widespread in nature, which they are not. Those biologists who mentioned the occurrence of such wild hybrids will also, i am sure, caution you against producing artificial hybrids and suggest that any accidental hybrids so produced should be destroyed.
Thank you for your support and advice Mantidlord!I disagree Philly ol buddy. It's not impossible to control any products of hybridization. If he keeps it in a controlled area and either eliminates the offspring after he proves it's possible, then problem solved. Second, if the offspring are infertile, then "controlling" isn't a problem at all. Go for it Nikko. Make sure it's extremely controlled. Well documented. And well thought out and planned out. Have a plan for even the worst case scenario (escapees). I'm not going to discourage you from doing something that may provide a lot of information on mantids. Although so far it isn't as well documented (if it were, threads like this wouldn't exist), you may be able to provide some valid results. And by valid, I don't mean successfull hybridization. I mean conclusive evidence that species X can/can't hybridize with species Y. Go for it.
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