Yes it is the same species. Leucophaea maderae and Rhyparobia maderae are synonym. Its the same species with a different name. It was originally described by Fabricius as Blatta maderae.
There is (still) some discussion about what the valid name is. AFAIK Rhyparobia is a isogenic synonym of Leucophaea, and Leucophaea maderae is the valid name. The genus Leucophaea was described previous to Rhyparobia, but no type species was assigned (Brunner 1865 describing the genus as subgenus of Panchlora). One of the four species assigned to Leucophaea was Fabricius's B. maderae. Then Rhyparobia was described with the type species B. maderae (F.) assigned to it (Krauss 1893). 1903 there was a publication with Leucophaea and the taxon maderae being assigned as type species (Rehn 1903). One year later Kirby designated, obviously not knowing about Rehn's paper, Blatta surinamensis as type species of Leucophaea.
I can't find the reference where i got this from right now. Its an older one, pre 1950's i think.
maybe all species have the same karyotype;/
A group of closely related species would share the same genus.
Organisms of the same species can mate and produce offspring.
They are members of the same species.
A population is a group of individuals of the same species living in the same area and interacting with each other.
no they are not the same species
They are considered to be in the same species.
maybe all species have the same karyotype;/
No, lions and tigers are not from the same species. Lions are of the species Panthera leo, while tigers are of the species Panthera tigris. They are both part of the Panthera genus, but belong to different species.
No, mice and rats are not the same species. They belong to different species within the rodent family.
No, they are different species but belong to the same genus of Panthera.
Members of the same or different species.
they can inter breed and produce fertile offspring.
No, but they both belong to the canid family.
Members of the same species can breed and produce viable offspring that will, when mated with others of the same species, also produce viable offspring.
They will belong to either the same family or species.
A group of closely related species would share the same genus.