In the Brachypelma (and others) family, there are different varieties, such as smithi, lassi etc etc.
Now I'm trying to try and understand all this so if I put it in other terms, can you tell me if I have my understanding correct.
Take the big cats, there are lions, tigers and leopards. In those groups there are other varieties such as African, Asiatic and Barbery in the lions. Bengal, Siberian etc in the tigers. Got my drift so far? Good. So is this the same principle for tarantulas? Also, can tarantulas inter breed? Tigers and lions in captivity have succesfly bred together. So based on that evidence, could (at least theoretically!) a Gramastola and a Brachypelma breed to create a Gramapelma.
I really enjoyed biology in high school, but that was 17 years ago and I've drunk a lot of alcohol since then. So not a lot of what I learnt has stayed up there.
Now I'm trying to try and understand all this so if I put it in other terms, can you tell me if I have my understanding correct.
Take the big cats, there are lions, tigers and leopards. In those groups there are other varieties such as African, Asiatic and Barbery in the lions. Bengal, Siberian etc in the tigers. Got my drift so far? Good. So is this the same principle for tarantulas? Also, can tarantulas inter breed? Tigers and lions in captivity have succesfly bred together. So based on that evidence, could (at least theoretically!) a Gramastola and a Brachypelma breed to create a Gramapelma.
I really enjoyed biology in high school, but that was 17 years ago and I've drunk a lot of alcohol since then. So not a lot of what I learnt has stayed up there.
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