Evolution is the process of change in all forms of life over generations, and evolutionary biology is the study of how evolution occurs. Biological populations evolve through genetic changes that correspond to changes in the organisms' observable traits. Genetic changes include mutations, which are caused by damage or replication errors in organisms' DNA. As the genetic variation of a population drifts randomly over generations, natural selection gradually leads traits to become more or less common based on the relative reproductive success of organisms with those traits.
The age of the Earth is about 4.54 billion years. The earliest undisputed evidence of life on Earth dates at least from 3.5 billion years ago. Evolution does not attempt to explain the origin of life (covered instead by abiogenesis), but it does explain how early lifeforms evolved into the complex ecosystem that we see today. Based on the similarities between all present-day organisms, all life on Earth is assumed to have originated through common descent from a last universal ancestor from which all known species have diverged through the process of evolution.
All individuals have hereditary material in the form of genes
received from their parents, which they pass on to any offspring. Among
offspring there are variations of genes due to the introduction of new
genes via random changes called mutations or via reshuffling of existing
genes during sexual reproduction.
The offspring differs from the parent in minor random ways. If those
differences are helpful, the offspring is more likely to survive and
reproduce. This means that more offspring in the next generation will
have that helpful difference and individuals will not have equal chances
of reproductive success. In this way, traits that result in organisms being better adapted to their living conditions become more common in descendant populations.
These differences accumulate resulting in changes within the
population. This process is responsible for the many diverse life forms
in the world.
The modern understanding of evolution began with the 1859 publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species. In addition, Gregor Mendel's work with plants helped to explain the hereditary patterns of genetics. Fossil discoveries in paleontology, advances in population genetics
and a global network of scientific research have provided further
details into the mechanisms of evolution. Scientists now have a good
understanding of the origin of new species (speciation) and have observed the speciation process in the laboratory and in the wild. Evolution is the principal scientific theory that biologists use to understand life and is used in many disciplines, including medicine, psychology, conservation biology, anthropology, forensics, agriculture and other social-cultural applications.
Simple overview
The main ideas of evolution may be summarized as follows:
- Life forms reproduce and therefore have a tendency to become more numerous.
- Factors such as predation and competition work against the survival of individuals.
- Each offspring differs from their parent(s) in minor, random ways.
- If these differences are beneficial, the offspring is more likely to survive and reproduce.
- This makes it likely that more offspring in the next generation will have beneficial differences and fewer will have detrimental differences.
- These differences accumulate over generations, resulting in changes within the population.
- Over time, populations can split or branch off into new species.
- These processes, collectively known as evolution, are responsible for the many diverse life forms seen in the world.
Natural selection
In the 19th century, natural history collections and museums were popular. The European expansion and naval expeditions employed naturalists, while curators
of grand museums showcased preserved and live specimens of the
varieties of life. Charles Darwin was an English graduate educated and
trained in the disciplines of natural history. Such natural historians
would collect, catalogue, describe and study the vast collections of
specimens stored and managed by curators at these museums. Darwin served
as a ship's naturalist on board HMS Beagle,
assigned to a five-year research expedition around the world. During
his voyage, he observed and collected an abundance of organisms, being
very interested in the diverse forms of life along the coasts of South
America and the neighboring Galápagos Islands.
Darwin gained extensive experience as he collected and studied the
natural history of life forms from distant places. Through his studies,
he formulated the idea that each species had developed from ancestors
with similar features. In 1838, he described how a process he called
natural selection would make this happen.
The size of a population depends on how much and how many
resources are able to support it. For the population to remain the same
size year after year, there must be an equilibrium, or balance between
the population size and available resources. Since organisms produce
more offspring than their environment can support, not all individuals
can survive out of each generation. There must be a competitive struggle
for resources that aid in survival. As a result, Darwin realised that
it was not chance alone that determined survival. Instead, survival of
an organism depends on the differences of each individual organism, or
"traits," that aid or hinder survival and reproduction. Well-adapted
individuals are likely to leave more offspring than their less
well-adapted competitors. Traits that hinder survival and reproduction
would disappear over generations. Traits that help an organism survive and reproduce would accumulate
over generations. Darwin realised that the unequal ability of
individuals to survive and reproduce could cause gradual changes in the
population and used the term natural selection to describe this process.
Observations of variations in animals and plants formed the basis of the theory of natural selection. For example, Darwin observed that orchids and insects have a close relationship that allows the pollination of the plants. He noted that orchids have a variety of structures that attract insects, so that pollen from the flowers
gets stuck to the insects' bodies. In this way, insects transport the
pollen from a male to a female orchid. In spite of the elaborate
appearance of orchids, these specialised parts are made from the same
basic structures that make up other flowers. In his book, Fertilisation of Orchids (1862), Darwin proposed that the orchid flowers were adapted from pre-existing parts, through natural selection.
Darwin was still researching and experimenting with his ideas on natural selection when he received a letter from Alfred Russel Wallace
describing a theory very similar to his own. This led to an immediate
joint publication of both theories. Both Wallace and Darwin saw the
history of life like a family tree,
with each fork in the tree’s limbs being a common ancestor. The tips of
the limbs represented modern species and the branches represented the
common ancestors that are shared amongst many different species. To
explain these relationships, Darwin said that all living things were
related, and this meant that all life must be descended from a few
forms, or even from a single common ancestor. He called this process descent with modification.
Darwin published his theory of evolution by natural selection in On the Origin of Species in 1859. His theory means that all life, including humanity, is a product of continuing natural processes. The implication that all life on Earth has a common ancestor has met with objections from some religious groups. Their objections are in contrast to the level of support for the theory by more than 99 percent of those within the scientific community today.
Natural selection is commonly equated with survival of the fittest, but this expression originated in Herbert Spencer's Principles of Biology in 1864, five years after Charles Darwin published his original works. Survival of the fittest
describes the process of natural selection incorrectly, because natural
selection is not only about survival and it is not always the fittest
that survives.
Source of variation
Darwin's
theory of natural selection laid the groundwork for modern evolutionary
theory, and his experiments and observations showed that the organisms
in populations varied from each other, that some of these variations
were inherited, and that these differences could be acted on by natural
selection. However, he could not explain the source of these variations.
Like many of his predecessors, Darwin mistakenly thought that heritable
traits were a product of use and disuse, and that features acquired
during an organism's lifetime could be passed on to its offspring. He
looked for examples, such as large ground feeding birds getting stronger legs through exercise, and weaker wings from not flying until, like the ostrich, they could not fly at all. This misunderstanding was called the inheritance of acquired characters and was part of the theory of transmutation of species put forward in 1809 by Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. In the late 19th century this theory became known as Lamarckism. Darwin produced an unsuccessful theory he called pangenesis to try to explain how acquired characteristics could be inherited. In the 1880s August Weismann's experiments indicated that changes from use and disuse could not be inherited, and Lamarckism gradually fell from favor.
The missing information needed to help explain how new features
could pass from a parent to its offspring was provided by the pioneering
genetics work of Gregor Mendel.
Mendel's experiments with several generations of pea plants
demonstrated that inheritance works by separating and reshuffling
hereditary information during the formation of sex cells and recombining
that information during fertilisation. This is like mixing different
hands of playing cards,
with an organism getting a random mix of half of the cards from one
parent, and half of the cards from the other. Mendel called the
information factors; however, they later became known as genes.
Genes are the basic units of heredity in living organisms. They contain
the information that directs the physical development and behavior of
organisms.
Genes are made of DNA. DNA is a long molecule made up of individual molecules called nucleotides.
Genetic information is encoded in the sequence of nucleotides, that
make up the DNA, just as the sequence of the letters in words carries
information on a page. The genes are like short instructions built up of
the "letters" of the DNA alphabet. Put together, the entire set of
these genes gives enough information to serve as an "instruction manual"
of how to build and run an organism. The instructions spelled out by
this DNA alphabet can be changed, however, by mutations, and this may
alter the instructions carried within the genes. Within the cell, the genes are carried in chromosomes,
which are packages for carrying the DNA. It is the reshuffling of the
chromosomes that results in unique combinations of genes in offspring.
Since genes interact with one another during the development of an
organism, novel combinations of genes produced by sexual reproduction
can increase the genetic variability of the population even without new
mutations. The genetic variability of a population can also increase when members of that population interbreed with individuals from a different population causing gene flow between the populations. This can introduce genes into a population that were not present before.
Evolution is not a random process. Although mutations in DNA are
random, natural selection is not a process of chance: the environment
determines the probability of reproductive success. Evolution is an
inevitable result of imperfectly copying, self-replicating organisms
reproducing over billions of years under the selective pressure of the
environment. The outcome of evolution is not a perfectly designed
organism. The end products of natural selection are organisms that are
adapted to their present environments. Natural selection does not
involve progress towards an ultimate goal. Evolution does not strive for more advanced, more intelligent, or more sophisticated life forms. For example, fleas (wingless parasites) are descended from a winged, ancestral scorpionfly, and snakes are lizards that no longer require limbs—although pythons still grow tiny structures that are the remains of their ancestor's hind legs. Organisms are merely the outcome of variations that succeed or fail, dependent upon the environmental conditions at the time.
Rapid environmental changes typically cause extinctions. Of all species that have existed on Earth, 99.9 percent are now extinct.
Since life began on Earth, five major mass extinctions have led to
large and sudden drops in the variety of species. The most recent, the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, occurred 66 million years ago.
Genetic drift
Genetic drift is a cause of allelic frequency change within populations of a species. Alleles are different variations of specific genes. They determine things like hair color, skin tone, eye color and blood type;
in other words, all the genetic traits that vary between individuals.
Genetic drift does not introduce new alleles to a population, but it can
reduce variation within a population by removing an allele from the
gene pool. Genetic drift is caused by random sampling of alleles. A
truly random sample is a sample in which no outside forces affect what
is selected. It is like pulling marbles of the same size and weight but
of different colors from a brown paper bag. In any offspring, the
alleles present are samples of the previous generations alleles, and
chance plays a role in whether an individual survives to reproduce and
to pass a sample of their generation onward to the next. The allelic
frequency of a population is the ratio of the copies of one specific
allele that share the same form compared to the number of all forms of
the allele present in the population.
Genetic drift affects smaller populations more than it affects larger populations.
Hardy–Weinberg principle
The Hardy–Weinberg principle
states that under certain idealized conditions, including the absence
of selection pressures, a large population will have no change in the
frequency of alleles as generations pass. A population that satisfies these conditions is said to be in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium. In particular, Hardy and Weinberg showed that dominant and recessive alleles do not automatically tend to become more and less frequent respectively, as had been thought previously.
The conditions for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium include that there must be no mutations, immigration, or emigration,
all of which can directly change allelic frequencies. Additionally,
mating must be totally random, with all males (or females in some cases)
being equally desirable mates. This ensures a true random mixing of
alleles. A population that is in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium is analogous to a deck of cards;
no matter how many times the deck is shuffled, no new cards are added
and no old ones are taken away. Cards in the deck represent alleles in a
population’s gene pool.
In practice, no population can be in perfect Hardy-Weinberg
equilibrium. The population's finite size, combined with natural
selection and many other effects, cause the allelic frequencies to
change over time.
Population bottleneck
A population bottleneck occurs when the population of a species is reduced drastically over a short period of time due to external forces.
In a true population bottleneck, the reduction does not favor any
combination of alleles; it is totally random chance which individuals
survive. A bottleneck can reduce or eliminate genetic variation from a
population. Further drift events after the bottleneck event can also
reduce the population's genetic diversity. The lack of diversity created can make the population at risk to other selective pressures.
A common example of a population bottleneck is the Northern elephant seal.
Due to excessive hunting throughout the 19th century, the population of
the northern elephant seal was reduced to 30 individuals or less. They
have made a full recovery, with the total number of individuals at
around 100,000 and growing. The effects of the bottleneck are visible,
however. The seals are more likely to have serious problems with disease
or genetic disorders, because there is almost no diversity in the
population.
Founder effect
The founder effect
occurs when a small group from one population splits off and forms a
new population, often through geographic isolation. This new
population's allelic frequency is probably different from the original
population's, and will change how common certain alleles are in the
populations. The founders of the population will determine the genetic
makeup, and potentially the survival, of the new population for
generations.
One example of the founder effect is found in the Amish migration to Pennsylvania in 1744. Two of the founders of the colony in Pennsylvania carried the recessive allele for Ellis–van Creveld syndrome.
Because the Amish tend to be religious isolates, they interbreed, and
through generations of this practice the frequency of Ellis–van Creveld
syndrome in the Amish people is much higher than the frequency in the
general population.
Modern synthesis
The modern evolutionary synthesis is based on the concept that
populations of organisms have significant genetic variation caused by
mutation and by the recombination of genes during sexual reproduction.
It defines evolution as the change in allelic frequencies within a
population caused by genetic drift, gene flow between sub populations,
and natural selection. Natural selection is emphasised as the most
important mechanism of evolution; large changes are the result of the
gradual accumulation of small changes over long periods of time.
The modern evolutionary synthesis is the outcome of a merger of several
different scientific fields to produce a more cohesive understanding of
evolutionary theory. In the 1920s, Ronald Fisher, J.B.S. Haldane and Sewall Wright combined Darwin's theory of natural selection with statistical models of Mendelian genetics,
founding the discipline of population genetics. In the 1930s and 1940s,
efforts were made to merge population genetics, the observations of
field naturalists on the distribution of species and sub species, and
analysis of the fossil record into a unified explanatory model. The application of the principles of genetics to naturally occurring populations, by scientists such as Theodosius Dobzhansky and Ernst Mayr, advanced the understanding of the processes of evolution. Dobzhansky's 1937 work Genetics and the Origin of Species helped bridge the gap between genetics and field biology
by presenting the mathematical work of the population geneticists in a
form more useful to field biologists, and by showing that wild
populations had much more genetic variability with geographically
isolated subspecies and reservoirs of genetic diversity in recessive
genes than the models of the early population geneticists had allowed
for. Mayr, on the basis of an understanding of genes and direct
observations of evolutionary processes from field research, introduced
the biological species concept, which defined a species as a group of
interbreeding or potentially interbreeding populations that are
reproductively isolated from all other populations. Both Dobzhansky and
Mayr emphasised the importance of subspecies reproductively isolated by
geographical barriers in the emergence of new species. The
paleontologist George Gaylord Simpson helped to incorporate paleontology
with a statistical analysis of the fossil record that showed a pattern
consistent with the branching and non-directional pathway of evolution
of organisms predicted by the modern synthesis.
Evidence for evolution
Scientific evidence for evolution comes from many aspects of biology and includes fossils, homologous structures, and molecular similarities between species' DNA.
Fossil record
Research in the field of paleontology,
the study of fossils, supports the idea that all living organisms are
related. Fossils provide evidence that accumulated changes in organisms
over long periods of time have led to the diverse forms of life we see
today. A fossil itself reveals the organism's structure and the
relationships between present and extinct species, allowing
paleontologists to construct a family tree for all of the life forms on
Earth.
Modern paleontology began with the work of Georges Cuvier. Cuvier noted that, in sedimentary rock,
each layer contained a specific group of fossils. The deeper layers,
which he proposed to be older, contained simpler life forms. He noted
that many forms of life from the past are no longer present today. One
of Cuvier’s successful contributions to the understanding of the fossil
record was establishing extinction as a fact. In an attempt to explain
extinction, Cuvier proposed the idea of "revolutions" or catastrophism
in which he speculated that geological catastrophes had occurred
throughout the Earth’s history, wiping out large numbers of species. Cuvier's theory of revolutions was later replaced by uniformitarian theories, notably those of James Hutton and Charles Lyell who proposed that the Earth’s geological changes were gradual and consistent.
However, current evidence in the fossil record supports the concept of
mass extinctions. As a result, the general idea of catastrophism has
re-emerged as a valid hypothesis for at least some of the rapid changes
in life forms that appear in the fossil records.
A very large number of fossils have now been discovered and
identified. These fossils serve as a chronological record of evolution.
The fossil record provides examples of transitional species that demonstrate ancestral links between past and present life forms. One such transitional fossil is Archaeopteryx, an ancient organism that had the distinct characteristics of a reptile (such as a long, bony tail and conical teeth) yet also had characteristics of birds (such as feathers and a wishbone). The implication from such a find is that modern reptiles and birds arose from a common ancestor.
Comparative anatomy
The comparison of similarities between organisms of their form or appearance of parts, called their morphology,
has long been a way to classify life into closely related groups. This
can be done by comparing the structure of adult organisms in different
species or by comparing the patterns of how cells grow, divide and even
migrate during an organism's development.
Taxonomy
Taxonomy
is the branch of biology that names and classifies all living things.
Scientists use morphological and genetic similarities to assist them in
categorising life forms based on ancestral relationships. For example, orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans all belong to the same taxonomic grouping referred to as a family—in this case the family called Hominidae. These animals are grouped together because of similarities in morphology that come from common ancestry (called homology).
Strong evidence for evolution comes from the analysis of homologous
structures: structures in different species that no longer perform the
same task but which share a similar structure. Such is the case of the forelimbs of mammals. The forelimbs of a human, cat, whale, and bat
all have strikingly similar bone structures. However, each of these
four species' forelimbs performs a different task. The same bones that
construct a bat's wings, which are used for flight, also construct a
whale's flippers, which are used for swimming. Such a "design" makes
little sense if they are unrelated and uniquely constructed for their
particular tasks. The theory of evolution explains these homologous
structures: all four animals shared a common ancestor, and each has
undergone change over many generations. These changes in structure have
produced forelimbs adapted for different tasks.
However, anatomical comparisons can be misleading, as not all
anatomical similarities indicate a close relationship. Organisms that
share similar environments will often develop similar physical features,
a process known as convergent evolution. Both sharks and dolphins have similar body forms, yet are only distantly related—sharks are fish and dolphins are mammals. Such similarities are a result of both populations being exposed to the same selective pressures.
Within both groups, changes that aid swimming have been favored. Thus,
over time, they developed similar appearances (morphology), even though
they are not closely related.
Embryology
In some cases, anatomical comparison of structures in the embryos
of two or more species provides evidence for a shared ancestor that may
not be obvious in the adult forms. As the embryo develops, these
homologies can be lost to view, and the structures can take on different
functions. Part of the basis of classifying the vertebrate group (which includes humans), is the presence of a tail (extending beyond the anus) and pharyngeal slits. Both structures appear during some stage of embryonic development but are not always obvious in the adult form.
Because of the morphological similarities present in embryos of
different species during development, it was once assumed that organisms
re-enact their evolutionary history as an embryo. It was thought that
human embryos passed through an amphibian then a reptilian stage before completing their development as mammals. Such a reenactment, often called recapitulation theory,
is not supported by scientific evidence. What does occur, however, is
that the first stages of development are similar in broad groups of
organisms. At very early
stages, for instance, all vertebrates appear extremely similar, but do
not exactly resemble any ancestral species. As development continues,
specific features emerge from this basic pattern.
Vestigial structures
Homology includes a unique group of shared structures referred to as vestigial structures. Vestigial
refers to anatomical parts that are of minimal, if any, value to the
organism that possesses them. These apparently illogical structures are
remnants of organs that played an important role in ancestral forms.
Such is the case in whales, which have small vestigial bones that appear
to be remnants of the leg bones of their ancestors which walked on land. Humans also have vestigial structures, including the ear muscles, the wisdom teeth, the appendix, the tail bone, body hair (including goose bumps), and the semilunar fold in the corner of the eye.
Biogeography
Biogeography is the study of the geographical distribution of species. Evidence from biogeography, especially from the biogeography of oceanic islands,
played a key role in convincing both Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace
that species evolved with a branching pattern of common descent.
Islands often contain endemic species, species not found anywhere else,
but those species are often related to species found on the nearest
continent. Furthermore, islands often contain clusters of closely
related species that have very different ecological niches, that is have different ways of making a living in the environment. Such clusters form through a process of adaptive radiation
where a single ancestral species colonises an island that has a variety
of open ecological niches and then diversifies by evolving into
different species adapted to fill those empty niches. Well-studied
examples include Darwin's finches, a group of 13 finch species endemic to the Galápagos Islands, and the Hawaiian honeycreepers,
a group of birds that once, before extinctions caused by humans,
numbered 60 species filling diverse ecological roles, all descended from
a single finch like ancestor that arrived on the Hawaiian Islands some 4 million years ago. Another example is the Silversword alliance,
a group of perennial plant species, also endemic to the Hawaiian
Islands, that inhabit a variety of habitats and come in a variety of
shapes and sizes that include trees, shrubs, and ground hugging mats,
but which can be hybridised with one another and with certain tarweed species found on the west coast of North America; it appears that one of those tarweeds colonised Hawaii in the past, and gave rise to the entire Silversword alliance.
Molecular biology
Every living organism (with the possible exception of RNA viruses)
contains molecules of DNA, which carries genetic information. Genes are
the pieces of DNA that carry this information, and they influence the
properties of an organism. Genes determine an individual's general
appearance and to some extent their behavior. If two organisms are
closely related, their DNA will be very similar.
On the other hand, the more distantly related two organisms are, the
more differences they will have. For example, brothers are closely
related and have very similar DNA, while cousins share a more distant
relationship and have far more differences in their DNA. Similarities in
DNA are used to determine the relationships between species in much the
same manner as they are used to show relationships between individuals.
For example, comparing chimpanzees with gorillas and humans shows that
there is as much as a 96 percent similarity between the DNA of humans
and chimps. Comparisons of DNA indicate that humans and chimpanzees are
more closely related to each other than either species is to gorillas.
The field of molecular systematics
focuses on measuring the similarities in these molecules and using this
information to work out how different types of organisms are related
through evolution. These comparisons have allowed biologists to build a relationship tree of the evolution of life on Earth.
They have even allowed scientists to unravel the relationships between
organisms whose common ancestors lived such a long time ago that no real
similarities remain in the appearance of the organisms.
Artificial selection
Artificial selection
is the controlled breeding of domestic plants and animals. Humans
determine which animal or plant will reproduce and which of the
offspring will survive; thus, they determine which genes will be passed
on to future generations. The process of artificial selection has had a
significant impact on the evolution of domestic animals. For example,
people have produced different types of dogs by controlled breeding. The differences in size between the Chihuahua and the Great Dane
are the result of artificial selection. Despite their dramatically
different physical appearance, they and all other dogs evolved from a
few wolves domesticated by humans in what is now China less than 15,000 years ago.
Artificial selection has produced a wide variety of plants. In the case of maize (corn), recent genetic evidence suggests that domestication occurred 10,000 years ago in central Mexico. Prior to domestication, the edible portion of the wild form was small and difficult to collect. Today The Maize Genetics Cooperation • Stock Center
maintains a collection of more than 10,000 genetic variations of maize
that have arisen by random mutations and chromosomal variations from the
original wild type.
In artificial selection the new breed or variety that emerges is
the one with random mutations attractive to humans, while in natural
selection the surviving species is the one with random mutations useful
to it in its non-human environment. In both natural and artificial
selection the variations are a result of random mutations, and the
underlying genetic processes are essentially the same.
Darwin carefully observed the outcomes of artificial selection in
animals and plants to form many of his arguments in support of natural
selection. Much of his book On the Origin of Species was based on these observations of the many varieties of domestic pigeons
arising from artificial selection. Darwin proposed that if humans could
achieve dramatic changes in domestic animals in short periods, then
natural selection, given millions of years, could produce the
differences seen in living things today.
Coevolution
Coevolution is a process in which two or more species influence the
evolution of each other. All organisms are influenced by life around
them; however, in coevolution there is evidence that genetically
determined traits in each species directly resulted from the interaction
between the two organisms.
An extensively documented case of coevolution is the relationship between Pseudomyrmex, a type of ant, and the acacia,
a plant that the ant uses for food and shelter. The relationship
between the two is so intimate that it has led to the evolution of
special structures and behaviors in both organisms. The ant defends the
acacia against herbivores and clears the forest floor of the seeds
from competing plants. In response, the plant has evolved swollen
thorns that the ants use as shelter and special flower parts that the
ants eat.
Such coevolution does not imply that the ants and the tree choose to behave in an altruistic
manner. Rather, across a population small genetic changes in both ant
and tree benefited each. The benefit gave a slightly higher chance of
the characteristic being passed on to the next generation. Over time,
successive mutations created the relationship we observe today.
Speciation
Given the right circumstances, and enough time, evolution leads to
the emergence of new species. Scientists have struggled to find a
precise and all-inclusive definition of species. Ernst Mayr
defined a species as a population or group of populations whose members
have the potential to interbreed naturally with one another to produce
viable, fertile offspring. (The members of a species cannot produce
viable, fertile offspring with members of other species). Mayr's definition has gained wide acceptance among biologists, but does not apply to organisms such as bacteria, which reproduce asexually.
Speciation is the lineage-splitting event that results in two
separate species forming from a single common ancestral population. A widely accepted method of speciation is called allopatric speciation. Allopatric speciation begins when a population becomes geographically separated.
Geological processes, such as the emergence of mountain ranges, the
formation of canyons, or the flooding of land bridges by changes in sea
level may result in separate populations. For speciation to occur,
separation must be substantial, so that genetic exchange between the two
populations is completely disrupted. In their separate environments,
the genetically isolated groups follow their own unique evolutionary
pathways. Each group will accumulate different mutations as well as be
subjected to different selective pressures. The accumulated genetic
changes may result in separated populations that can no longer
interbreed if they are reunited. Barriers that prevent interbreeding are either prezygotic (prevent mating or fertilisation) or postzygotic
(barriers that occur after fertilisation). If interbreeding is no
longer possible, then they will be considered different species.
The result of four billion years of evolution is the diversity of life
around us, with an estimated 1.75 million different species in existence
today.
Usually the process of speciation is slow, occurring over very
long time spans; thus direct observations within human life-spans are
rare. However speciation has been observed in present-day organisms, and
past speciation events are recorded in fossils.
Scientists have documented the formation of five new species of cichlid
fishes from a single common ancestor that was isolated fewer than
5,000 years ago from the parent stock in Lake Nagubago.
The evidence for speciation in this case was morphology (physical
appearance) and lack of natural interbreeding. These fish have complex
mating rituals and a variety of colorations; the slight modifications
introduced in the new species have changed the mate selection process
and the five forms that arose could not be convinced to interbreed.
Mechanism
The
theory of evolution is widely accepted among the scientific community,
serving to link the diverse specialty areas of biology.
Evolution provides the field of biology with a solid scientific base.
The significance of evolutionary theory is summarised by Theodosius
Dobzhansky as "nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution."
Nevertheless, the theory of evolution is not static. There is much
discussion within the scientific community concerning the mechanisms
behind the evolutionary process. For example, the rate at which
evolution occurs is still under discussion. In addition, there are
conflicting opinions as to which is the primary unit of evolutionary
change—the organism or the gene.
Rate of change
Darwin
and his contemporaries viewed evolution as a slow and gradual process.
Evolutionary trees are based on the idea that profound differences in
species are the result of many small changes that accumulate over long
periods.
Gradualism
had its basis in the works of the geologists James Hutton and Charles
Lyell. Hutton's view suggests that profound geological change was the
cumulative product of a relatively slow continuing operation of
processes which can still be seen in operation today, as opposed to
catastrophism which promoted the idea that sudden changes had causes
which can no longer be seen at work. A uniformitarian perspective was
adopted for biological changes. Such a view can seem to contradict the
fossil record, which often shows evidence of new species appearing
suddenly, then persisting in that form for long periods. In the 1970s
paleontologists Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould
developed a theoretical model that suggests that evolution, although a
slow process in human terms, undergoes periods of relatively rapid
change (ranging between 50,000 and 100,000 years) alternating with long periods of relative stability. Their theory is called punctuated equilibrium and explains the fossil record without contradicting Darwin's ideas.
Unit of change
A common unit of selection
in evolution is the organism. Natural selection occurs when the
reproductive success of an individual is improved or reduced by an
inherited characteristic, and reproductive success is measured by the
number of an individual's surviving offspring. The organism view has
been challenged by a variety of biologists as well as philosophers. Richard Dawkins
proposes that much insight can be gained if we look at evolution from
the gene's point of view; that is, that natural selection operates as an
evolutionary mechanism on genes as well as organisms. In his 1976 book, The Selfish Gene, he explains:
“ | Individuals are not stable things, they are fleeting. Chromosomes too are shuffled to oblivion, like hands of cards soon after they are dealt. But the cards themselves survive the shuffling. The cards are the genes. The genes are not destroyed by crossing-over, they merely change partners and march on. Of course they march on. That is their business. They are the replicators and we are their survival machines. When we have served our purpose we are cast aside. But genes are denizens of geological time: genes are forever. | ” |
Others view selection working on many levels, not just at a single
level of organism or gene; for example, Stephen Jay Gould called for a
hierarchical perspective on selection.