>>Honeybees are not native to North America.
Neither are horses.
I guess the issue is you don't get honey with the native bees.
>>Honeybees are not native to North America.
Neither are horses.
I guess the issue is you don't get honey with the native bees.
There were native horses, in fact the genus began in N. America and migrated out. Remains have been found in permafrost in Northern Canada. They went extinct about 12,700 years ago, sometime after humans arrived.
Neither with horses
Good point. We need to genetically modify horses that can pollinate plants and create honey.
GMO hyper competitive feral cat colonies that ignore birds and pollinate gmo soybeans whilst collecting for their kitten hives. Each claw is of course a stinger. What could go wrong.
"Ohh, soo cute! Here little kitty! OMG... RUN!!!"
yay, horse vomit.
A quite similar horse species went extinct in North America ~10,000 years ago likely due to humans.
The horse ancestor species come from the Americas and migrated to Eurasia over the bearing land bridge.
Horses were only missing from North America for 10,000 of the last 50 million years.
I was about to say the same: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_the_horse#Equus
Of all the examples to pick from, seeing GP picked horse made me wonder if GP was doing it for gits and shiggles.
I've always had a soft spot for the plan of repopulating the Great Plains with modern versions of all the extinct megafauna. We used to have camels and cheetahs and lions and more. We could import half of the African large mammals and they would have had near species analogs in the relatively recent past, geologically speaking.