Subspecies in a sentence as a noun

Would you call them a new subspecies or pick one of the parents' taxonomy?

""I guess I'm one of the members of that contemptible subspecies.

So huge that all the other subspecies are competed to extinction.

The distinction is that dogs and wolves are different subspecies.

You can recognize this contemptible subspecies of investor because they often talk about "leads.

An ecological situation arises which gives one subspecies a huge, but temporary, advantage.

There exists a whole subspecies of Linux users that are somewhat akin to hypermillers who turn this kind of dilemma into a game and compete for lowest wattage.

Not only is PG very influential at many of the companies these investors would want to invest in, but most of these investors are also going to be hesitant to out themselves as being a "contemptible subspecies of investor".

For example if there is a genus with three species, each of which is very similar and has very little distinctive written about it, the normal organization would be to write one article on the genus, with a short discussion of each subspecies in the main article, not broken out into three separate duplicative and near-empty articles.

If you look at groups of organisms as systems, and you pit the systems against each other, surely eventually the system that evolved to be superior would win in the end, regardless of whether that means any subspecies in that group of organisms would evolve to not reproduce?Of course, all other things equal, when you pit groups against each other then group selection will occur.

Subspecies definitions

noun

(biology) a taxonomic group that is a division of a species; usually arises as a consequence of geographical isolation within a species

See also: race