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Old 01-16-2017, 05:58 AM
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Originally Posted by Guest
Different species cannot mate.
Oh yes they can. Please stop proving your ignorance. I don't speak unless I know what I'm talking about. You'd be wise to LISTEN and not argue.

ANY mammal with differences as vast as between the races WOULD be classified as different species...subspecies at the least. The races are VERY different. Blacks are NOT us.


Hybrid (biology - Wikipedia)

Mammals
A "zonkey", a zebra/donkey hybrid
A "jaglion", a jaguar/lion hybrid

Equid hybrids
Mule, a cross of female horse and a male donkey
Hinny, a cross between a female donkey and a male horse (Mule and hinny are examples of reciprocal hybrids)
Zebroids
Zeedonk or Zonkey, a zebra/donkey cross
Zorse, a zebra/horse cross
Zony or Zetland, a zebra/pony cross ("zony" is a generic term; "zetland" is specifically a hybrid of the Shetland pony breed with a zebra)
hybrid ass, a cross between a donkey and an onager or Asian wild ass
Bovid hybrids
Dzo, zo or yakow; a cross between a domestic cow/bull and a yak
Beefalo, a cross of an American bison and a domestic cow. This is a fertile breed; this along with genetic evidence has caused them to be recently reclassified into the same genus, Bos.[citation needed]
Żubroń, a hybrid between wisent (European bison) and domestic cow
"Higgs bison", a naturally occurring hybrid between aurochs and steppe bison that appeared during the Pleistocene; likely gave rise to the wisent.
Sheep-goat hybrid is the cross between a sheep and a goat, which belong to different genera.
Ursid hybrids, such as the grizzly-polar bear hybrid, occur between black bears, brown bears, and polar bears.
Felid hybrids
Savannah cat is a fertile breed developed originally from a cross between the serval (Leptailurus serval) and domestic cats (Felis catus).
A hybrid between a Bengal tiger and a Siberian tiger is an example of an intra-specific hybrid. It also includes the Indochinese tiger, Sumatran tiger.
Pumapards are the hybrid crosses between a puma and a leopard.
Ligers and tigons (crosses between a lion and a tiger - the difference in name due to which parent is of which species - ligers have a lion father and a tiger mother) and other Panthera hybrids such as the lijagulep. Various other wild cat crosses are known involving the lynx, bobcat, leopard, serval, etc.
Liligers are the hybrid cross between a male lion and a ligress.
Bengals are a fertile breed developed originally from a cross between the Asian leopard cat [Prionailurus bengalensis] and the domestic cat [Felis catus].
Fertile canid hybrids occur between coyotes, wolves, dingoes, jackals and domestic dogs.
Hybrids between black and white rhinoceroses have been recognized.
Hybrid camel, a cross between a bactrian camel and a dromedary camel[22]
Cama, a cross between a camel and a llama, also an intergeneric hybrid.
Wholphin, a fertile but very rare cross between a false killer whale and a bottlenose dolphin.
At Chester Zoo in the United Kingdom, a cross between an African elephant (male) and an Asian elephant (female). The male calf was named Motty. He died of intestinal infection after twelve days.
Bornean and Sumatran orangutan hybrids have occurred in captivity.

Birds
See also: Bird hybrid
A mule, a domestic canary/goldfinch hybrid

Hybrids between spotted owls and barred owls
Cagebird breeders sometimes breed hybrids between species of finch, such as goldfinch × canary. These birds are known as mules.
The perlin is a peregrine falcon – merlin hybrid.
Gamebird hybrids, hybrids between gamebirds and domestic fowl, including chickens, guineafowl and peafowl, interfamilial hybrids.
Numerous macaw hybrids and lovebird hybrids are also known in aviculture.
Red kite × black kite: five bred unintentionally at a falconry center in England. (It is reported[weasel words] that the black kite (the male) refused female black kites but mated with two female red kites.)
The mulard duck, hybrid of the domestic pekin duck and domesticated muscovy ducks.
In Australia, New Zealand and other areas where the Pacific black duck occurs, it is hybridised by the much more aggressive introduced mallard. This is a concern to wildlife authorities throughout the affected area, as it is seen as Genetic pollution of the black duck gene pool.
Hybridisation in gulls is a reasonably frequent occurrence in the wild.

Reptiles

Hybrid iguana, a single‐cross hybrid resulting from natural interbreeding between male marine iguanas and female land iguanas since the late 2000s.
Crestoua, a cross between a Rhacodactylus Ciliatus (crested gecko) and a Rhacodactylus Chahoua.
Colubrid snakes of the tribe Lampropeltini have been shown to produce fertile hybrid offspring.
Hybridization between the endemic Cuban crocodile (Crocodilus rhombifer) and the widely distributed American crocodile (Crocodilus acutus) is causing conservation problems for the former species as a threat to its genetic integrity.[23][clarification needed]
Saltwater crocodiles (Crocodylus porosus) have mated with Siamese crocodiles (Crocodylus siamensis) in captivity producing offspring which in many cases have grown over 20 feet (6.1 metres) in length. It is likely that wild hybridization occurred historically in parts of southeast Asia.
Many species of boas and pythons are known to produce hybrids, such as carball (a cross between a ball python and a carpet python) or a bloodball (a cross between a blood python and a ball python); however most of these only occur in captivity. Contrary to popular belief, boa–python hybrids are not possible due to their differing reproductive functions. Boas only produce hybrids with other species of boas, and pythons only produce hybrids with other species of pythons.

Amphibians

Japanese giant salamanders and Chinese giant salamanders have created hybrids that threaten the survival of Japanese giant salamanders due to the competition for similar resources in Japan.[24]

Fish

Blood parrot cichlid, which is probably created by crossing a red head cichlid and a Midas cichlid or red devil cichlid
A group of about 50 hybrids between Australian blacktip shark and the larger common blacktip shark was found by Australia's East Coast in 2012. This is the only known case of hybridization in sharks.[25]
Silver bream and common bream commonly produce sterile hybrids.
Tiger muskie is a sterile hybrid between northern pike and muskellunge.

Insects

Killer bees were created during an attempt to breed a strain of bees that would produce more honey and be better adapted to tropical conditions. This was done by crossing a European honey bee and an African bee.
The Colias eurytheme and C. philodice butterflies have retained enough genetic compatibility to produce viable hybrid offspring.[26]