1239
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(mander.xyz)
A place for majestic STEMLORD peacocking, as well as memes about the realities of working in a lab.
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It worked for chickens...
Chickens are the most numerous bird on the planet, wheat covers more land area than any other plant.
And live their lives in fucking misery and suffering, at least most of em.
But they keep reproducing, which is really all that it takes to make a successful species. It's really not about suffering when it comes to evolution. Alleles don't care whether or not suffering is involved.
I'm not advocating chicken farming, I'm just saying that in evolutionary terms, chickens are one of the most successful species on the planet.
I disagree.
Evolution is not so much a numbers game. Otherwise Bacteria, Ants, Viruses and the like would have to be crowned winners. So the point op brings up is ~~mute~~ moot.
The point you add, that they keep reproducing, is also not relevant in evelotionary terms. The short amount of time that we have domesticated chickens, let a side the very resent industalisation of animal farming (it started in the 1950s ish), is just not relevante in evelotionary terms.
I'd say what makes a successfull species is resilience. 99 % of all species have gone extinct. The "winners" of evelotion are, in my opinion, those species that have lasted the longest. And in that regard, chicken ain't looking to good. They are highly dependent upon humans. Most industrial chickens are genetic aborninatons, bred for beeing fat, fast growing, egg laying machines to the point where their own bones brake because they lack calcium. I'd argue that chickens in their current form would not last long in "the wild". Hence once humans are gone their is a high chance chickens will follow.
They are. And you mean 'moot.'
Also, you don't know what evolution is. It's a change in allele frequency over time. All that is needed for that is continued reproduction.