Thread:Dinoman972/@comment-32744161-20180528145333/@comment-24941009-20180604152300

Yeah, maybe the spikes weren't the best example (Oozlebachridae). Let's say one has two proboscides and the other doesn't. But they are exactly the same in everything else. Same body shape, same mouthpart, all other parts are the same... Would we separate them by genus AND family? Because that's what you're suggesting. I don't see how would the current system do that.

Also, you still respond only to the questions you prefer to answer. I just want to end this once and for all. Do you realise we have been discussing about this for around two entire weeks? All the time we could have spent on more important things, we spent them on talking about two microbes. You can come up with as many new systems as you want, but that won't fix the problem here: the two cells are very different and you don't admit it. Why don't you?