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Showing posts with label Evolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evolution. Show all posts

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Guppies Show Evolution Can Be Relatively Fast

Here's a cool study that shows evolution in action: A team of researchers including Swanne Gordon, a biology grad student at the University of California, Riverside, took guppies from the Yarra River in Trinidad and put them into a section of the nearby Damier River that is above a waterfall. Because of the barrier, this section of the river doesn't have any predators. The guppies then also colonized the part of the river below the waterfall, where they coexist with predatory fish.
How did the guppies adapt to their new environment? Rather well. After eight years and less than 30 guppy generations, the researchers discovered that the guppies above the waterfall had produced fewer and larger offspring with each reproductive cycle.
As Gordon explains:

High-predation females invest more resources into current reproduction because a high rate of mortality, driven by predators, means these females may not get another chance to reproduce. Low-predation females, on the other hand, produce larger embryos because the larger babies are more competitive in the resource-limited environments typical of low-predation sites. Moreover, low-predation females produce fewer embryos not only because they have larger embryos but also because they invest fewer resources in current reproduction.

There's also a second part to the experiment. The team took a group of guppies from part of the Yarra River that has predators and a group from a tributary that has no predators and put them in both sections of the Damier River. After four weeks, they checked back and found that the resident guppies from the first experiment—those that had already adapted to the local environment—were more likely to have survived than the newly transplanted guppies. In other words, the first set of guppies had developed a new, advantageous trait in a relatively short period of time. (Keep in mind that generations go much faster for guppies, which have a short lifespan, than for longer-lived species.)

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Happy 200th Birthday, Darwin

Our wish for you this year: that people celebrate the occasion by reconciling the theory of evolution with their personal faith—so that next year, more than 58 percent of Americans will believe humans developed over millions of years from less advanced forms of life.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Martin Nowak & the Math of Evolution's Origin

Scientific American has just published my piece on Martin Nowak, who directs the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard University. Nowak can predict the future. He can predict, for instance, the rate at which English verbs evolve and where a cancerous tumor might grow. He can tell whether people will succeed by working together, or whether it pays to be selfish. Now, he’s turned his attention to the past, using math to explain the origin of evolution and what he calls "prelife." His model of life's origin was published on Friday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
After years studying replication—how HIV and cancer cells replicate in people’s bodies, how genes are passed to offspring—Nowak wanted to know whether there can be some degree of evolution without replication: Can there still be selection and mutation? And how does replication emerge? In other words, asks Nowak, “what leads from no life to life? We’re trying to describe that system mathematically." For answers to these questions, check out the story online at SciAm. —Heather Wax

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

David Sloan Wilson Speaks

David Sloan Wilson, an evolutionary biologist at Binghamton University in New York, spoke with Robert Lorei of Tampa, Florida, radio station WMNF yesterday about "Evolution in Everyday Life." Wilson, whose most recent book is Evolution for Everyone: How Darwin's Theory Can Change the Way We Think About Our Lives, spoke about science curriculum and how evolution impacts relationships, religion, and psychology. This weekend, Wilson will speak at the 2008 Humanists of Florida Conference in Sarasota.

Friday, February 8, 2008

ISSR Slams "Intelligent Design"

The International Society for Science and Religion has issued a statement that strongly criticizes "intelligent design" for being "neither sound science nor good theology." The ISSR is composed of more than 140 members, including a number of past Templeton Prize winners, such as the Rev. Dr. John Polkinghorne, Ian Barbour, John Barrow, Charles Townes, and George Ellis. —Heather Wax