From: "Niclas Runarsson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [VFB] Chilli Pepper Classification- scientific Date: Fri, 5 May 2006 22:57:00 +0200 Well, what makes a WB a Pepper? what makes a Pepper a Chilly Pepper? I asume that the bead head and the red / orange thread, which forms the neck below the bead are necessary to make it a Pepper. Whaddayall think? ************************************************** The first thing that comes to my mind is the tinsel chenille (flash chenille, crystal chenille or whatever the manufacturer has named it as)instead of the regular chenille. Next thing will be the 8 strands of crystalflash in the tail.I, personally, don't think the bead should matter. I mean a bead on a Hare's Ear Nymph didn't make it seize to be a Hare's Ear Nymph... it just got to bea Beadheaded HEN. So a Woolly Bugger with a bead should just make it a Beadheaded Woolly Bugger. So, to be scientific about then (thinking in parallel with what I learned from herpetology studies): My own Black Peppers have all the ingredients that the true Chili Pepper ('Chili pepprus pepprus') has, only in black, which I think makes them 'Peppers'. Really just the same species spreading to other habitats and mother nature creates color adaptations. Sometimes these will be refered as subspecies ('Chili pepprus blackentrix') and sometimes they will be refered only as a color variant of the species. When I tied my Grizzly Peppers, theevolution step was more radical, since now we're talking a different kind ofmarabou feathers... and an actual physical change is good enough to make them a subspecies (Chili pepprus grizzlii). Now Ian has tied a variant of my Black Pepper using 'black chenille with just a touch of flash', chenille/flash blend... so now it gets moreinteresting. If my Black Pepper is one of those "color variants", then Ian'sfly (with a PHYSICAL material change), would be a subspecies to the Chili Pepper and a "brother" to the Grizzly Pepper... maybe a 'Chili pepprus chenastes'. But if my Black Pepper made it to subspecies, the rock might start to roll. Ian's variant might actually break the family into two. I don't have a PhD, but I know this has happened to some snakes. A new snake variant is found and they cheer "YES!!! ANOTHER SUBSPECIES!!!"... but thenthey discover that this isn't correct. The snake has turned out to be closer to an already existing subspeices than it is to the actual top species. Theywon't give it a fourth name. They won't place it as a separate species, since it's closer to another snake's subspecies than the true species. So...... the already existing subspecies will be put as a new species, with the new snake as it's subspecies. So my Black Pepper gets kicked out of the Pepper family and gets named 'Chili leechus leechus' and Ian's fly gets named 'Chili leechus chenastes'. And now we enter the comic side of the scientific side. I've heard or readsomething about the Chili Pepper first started as some kind of joke. Someonerefused to tie a bugger on the tippet and this, or a variant, was given to him. Something like that. Obviously this will be hard proof that the Chili Pepper is a younger species than the WB. The difference between them are merely the flash material and the bead. Evolution grabbed hold of the bugger and turned it into a Chili Pepper, which developed subspecies of its own. Ian's fly made it too crowded so the fly I tied as a subspecies got kicked to a new branch on the tree. Nature forms and adapts and species are born, just like it has always been...except in this case. The Peppers had left chenille a long time ago, but whenIan chose chenille/flash blend for the body of his fly 'Chili leechus chenastes', his fly is actually taking the 'Chili leechus' family back to where it started... Buggers. Nature going in reverse!!! And since my fly is now on top of that branch, I will be the one taking the fall for starting it. ...and this while the 'Chili pepprus' family advances and advances. :o( /Nick
I think that may be the most I have ever read about a Wooly pepper bugger
chilied.
- Re: [VFB] Chilli Pepper Classification- scientific Charlie Bonner
- RE: [VFB] Chilli Pepper Classification- scientific Niclas Runarsson
- Re: [VFB] Chilli Pepper Classification- scientific TomSwa59
- Re: [VFB] Chilli Pepper Classification- scientific Anthony Spezio
