Hybrid
- This article is about a biological term. See hybrid (disambiguation) for other meanings.
Ernst Mayr wrote of Gregor Mendel, "He was uncertain about the nature of the kinds of peas he crossed, and, like most plant breeders, he called heterozygotes "hybrids." When he tried to confirm the laws he had found by using "other hybrids" that were actually real species hybrids, he failed. The use of the same term "hybrid" for two entirely different biological phenomena thwarted his later efforts." (This is Biology, 1997, p58f).
Plant hybrids, especially, may or may not be stronger than either parent variety, a phenomenon which when present is known as hybrid vigour. In animals, hybrids often manifest reduced fertility or, like the mule are sterile.
Some interspecies hybrids are:
- Mule, a cross of female horse and a male donkey
- Hinny, a cross between a female donkey and a male horse
- Beefalo, a cross of an American bison and a domestic cow, this is a fertile breed
- Wolfdog, the cross between a domestic dog and a wolf. Crosses also occur between coyote, wolves, dingos, and domestic dogs. Many of these produce fertile animals.
- Crosses between zebra and horses or donkeys.
- Liger (or Tigon, depending on the parents' genders), a cross between a lion and a tiger. Various other wild cat crosses are known involving lynx, bobcat, leopard, serval, etc.
- Cama, a cross between a camel and a llama
- Wolphin, a fertile but very rare cross between a false killer whale and a bottlenose dolphin
- A fertile cross between an albino king snake and an albino corn snake