Message from @Fyrjefe

Discord ID: 667224572877078554


2020-01-16 04:27:17 UTC  

I heard Spaniards considered capybara fish so that they could eat it during lent

2020-01-16 04:27:28 UTC  

lizard is lizard. it's up there on the eat list for me. haven't had lizard yet

2020-01-16 04:27:30 UTC  

but ofc you fucking humans don't learn about your foods so you don't know proper taxonomy

2020-01-16 04:27:35 UTC  

@Catboi gators are very closely related to birds, much more so than to sharks

2020-01-16 04:27:47 UTC  

How long ago did birds first appear?

2020-01-16 04:28:44 UTC  

that meat and flesh thing is interesting. that's a kind of distinction that i remember learninga bout when it came to waste aand garbage and trash. the middle one is organs

2020-01-16 04:29:00 UTC  

discarded, of course

2020-01-16 04:29:07 UTC  

Like 60 Mya

2020-01-16 04:29:21 UTC  

This is like saying we're more closely related to blacks than chimpanzese because we're in the same Phylum

2020-01-16 04:29:24 UTC  

fucking retarded

2020-01-16 04:29:48 UTC  

the phylum categorization is up in the air as genetic stuff is getting more accurate

2020-01-16 04:30:02 UTC  

Yeah so you say, you fucking miscegenator

2020-01-16 04:30:21 UTC  

yeah, of gauls and germans. like most people in europe

2020-01-16 04:30:23 UTC  

Whatever you have to say to justify your degeneracy

2020-01-16 04:31:03 UTC  

@Fyrjefe bird taxonomy is really new because a lot of it relies on genetics

2020-01-16 04:31:08 UTC  

Talking about this stuff and saying it changes is retarded because it's based on observation as well as evidence from specimens

2020-01-16 04:31:18 UTC  

Taxonomy has changed ever since it was created

2020-01-16 04:31:23 UTC  

and will continue to change

2020-01-16 04:31:32 UTC  

that doesn't make what I said any less relavent

2020-01-16 04:32:13 UTC  

@Fyrjefe for example until recently they grouped hawks and falcons together (understandably) until modern DNA analysis

2020-01-16 04:32:14 UTC  

@Weepy ìnteresting point. I found out about this actually because they recently found out the asian elephant is quite distantly related to the african one. they share two removed common ancestors.

2020-01-16 04:32:32 UTC  

Listen just because you wanna fuck dogs. Arguing that because science modifies and corrects itself that it somehow justifies it because some animals are moved over and phylums are merging or splitting...

2020-01-16 04:32:35 UTC  

it's just nonsense

2020-01-16 04:33:07 UTC  

This is a ***cat***astrophic argument you guys are making

2020-01-16 04:33:10 UTC  

WAKE UP

2020-01-16 04:33:57 UTC  

I want to start evolving new species of animals, like introducing elephants to colder climates particularly ones with thicker hair so we can have a new species of mammoth

2020-01-16 04:34:38 UTC  

@Fyrjefe Yeah it’s super interesting. Like how if you looked at a salamander and lizard, you’d guess they are closer relatives to eachother than either are to mammals, but that’s not true. Amphibians are the outgroup to all tetrapods. Mammals and reptiles share a more recent common ancestor.

2020-01-16 04:35:20 UTC  

@Lord Zedd they are trying really hard to clone a mammoth I heard

2020-01-16 04:35:26 UTC  

nice

2020-01-16 04:35:31 UTC  

Some animals like dogs are hyper mutable as well, all "species" of dogs are genetically the same species.

2020-01-16 04:35:32 UTC  

@Weepy I wouldn't guess taht, but I don't eat Charcoal

2020-01-16 04:35:42 UTC  
2020-01-16 04:35:48 UTC  

subspecies are a thing dingus

2020-01-16 04:35:52 UTC  

or you could introduce camels to the Himalayas or the Andes they actually evolved for colder climates so it'd be cool so new breeds come about

2020-01-16 04:36:24 UTC  

and we could introduce elephants to island climates and hope for pygmy elephants that we can have as pets

2020-01-16 04:37:11 UTC  

Well Luigi when CRISPR becomes private we know who will be responsible for the modern island of doctor Moraeu.

2020-01-16 04:37:31 UTC  

no comment....

2020-01-16 04:37:38 UTC  

"Subspecies: A group within a particular species that shares genetic characteristics with other group members but that it doesn’t share with members of the larger species. Subspecies may interbreed quite freely or may be partially reproductively isolated — that is, they can interbreed but don’t do it as well, or produce offspring as viable, as when they mate within their own subspecies group. Subspecies can range from ever-so-slightly-different groups within a species to groups that are on the verge of speciation. For example, the cobra and the pine snake are completely different species, but pine snakes are divided into subspecies, such as the black pine snake, Florida pine snake, and Louisiana pine snake."

2020-01-16 04:38:05 UTC  

it'd be cool to see Lions back in Europe too

2020-01-16 04:38:15 UTC  

and apes

2020-01-16 04:38:18 UTC  

I love that kevin is still with us, but only in blue letters