Hybridissa
Hybridissa is a term used in speculative biology, bioengineering, and science and technology studies to describe systems or organisms that combine two or more distinct lineages, modalities, or materials to produce hybrid traits or functions. The concept encompasses biological hybrids that integrate cells or tissues from different species, as well as machine-assisted or synthetic hybrids that blend biological and informational substrates, such as biohybrid robots or computer-aided gene circuits. The word is a neologism built from hybrid and the Latin-influenced suffix -issa, and is used across disciplines to signal a deliberate fusion rather than a simple juxtaposition of parts.
In biology, hybridissa can refer to chimeras created by cellular grafts, or to organisms that inherit genetic
The term emerged in late 20th and early 21st century interdisciplinary discourse, gaining prominence as synthetic
See also: chimerism, synthetic biology, biohybrid, cybernetics, hybrid vigor.