• BobDole [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    2 days ago

    Mammals may have evolved from scaly animals too, and some mammals still have scale-like structures (pangolin, some rodents). Should we also call furries scalies? No, hair and feathers are distinct structures from scales. Taxonomy becomes meaningless when it’s too broad.

    This is like the whole “nerd tomato is a fruit!” redditism. Yes, this is true, but vegetable isn’t a botanical classification; it’s a culinary classification, and including tomatoes in the “fruit” culinary category is irresponsible, as the differences between fruits and vegetables culinarily has more to do with the sweet, sour, and savory flavors than their biological purpose.

    • loaExMachina [any]@hexbear.net
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      2 days ago

      This wasn’t a very serious comment, but now I feel like fighting you on this.

      Mammals may have evolved from scaly animals too

      Not directly, early therapsids had naked skin. Some earlier synapsids had scales, but it’s unkown if it was a general thing or something that evolved independently in a few lineages. You gotta go back almost as far as fishes for something that was definitely a mammal ancestor and that we’re sure had scales.

      some mammals still have scale-like structures (pangolin, some rodents)

      Pangolins are scaly tho. As for rodents, only the tail is scaly, so you don’t typically call the whole beast scaly.

      Should we also call furries scalies?

      It’d be strange to apply it to all furries when only a minority of mammals have scales.

      No, hair and feathers are distinct structures from scales.

      They all share a common basis (and with teeth as well), but feathers are arguably closer to reptilian scales:

      • They’re formed of beta-keratin, like the scales of other reptiles and unlike hair which is made of alpha-keratin.

      • Both are attested in dinosaurs, some had both feathers and non-feather scales.

      Basically, feathers are directly modified scales. Hair appeared from scaleless creatures, altho it did use a gene that had been involved in making scales in this scaleless creature’s distant ancestors.

      You could make a point that bird furries could be called “featheries”, which would be more precise and accurate than " scalies". However in absence of this term (which has been proposed several times bug never really enterered general use, “scaly” is more accurate than “furry”.

      Tomato

      Irrelevant.

      • BobDole [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        1 day ago

        This wasn’t a very serious comment, but now I feel like fighting you on this.

        may have

        smuglord

        (That’s supposed to be me, to be clear, as I have not been clear about the level of joking)