PYMundGenealogy

PYMundGenealogy t1_iycxt6w wrote

Fun fact: most plant names ending in -ia are named in the honour of someone, usually a botanist, with the first part of the name coming from their family name. Magnolia? A botanist named Magnol. Zinnia? Zinn. Dahlia? Dahl. Begonia? Bégon. (And so on. Petunia being the first exception I could find - petun is a native name for the plant.)

17

PYMundGenealogy t1_ixm653a wrote

For a long answer you'll need to wait for an expert; for a TL;DR: No.

Number of unique genes/quantity of meaningful DNA is ... more correlated to complexity (but also not that simple) but chromosome number can be ‘messed with’ just by having the same genetic material split into smaller chromosomes, with no effect on the organism's genetic makeup, so the number doesn't matter at all.

(See Wikipedia on microchromosomes for an example, relevant in that exotic creature, ‘chicken’.)

9