- This article is about evolution in the biological sense. For other possible
meanings, see Evolution
(disambiguation).
Evolution is any process of growth or development that entails
change. The word stems from the Latin evolutio meaning "unfolding" and before
the late 19th century was confined to referring to goal-directed,
pre-programmed processes such as embryological development. A pre-programmed task, as in a military maneuver, using this
definition, may be termed an "evolution." One can also speak of stellar evolution, chemical evolution,
cultural evolution, spiritual evolution or the evolution of an idea. Other kinds of
evolution include evolutionary algorithms (which
include genetic algorithms) which attempt to mimic processes
similar to biological evolution in a computer program, most
frequently as an optimization technique and as an experimental framework
for the computational modelling of evolution.
Modern usage
In the 19th century the word "evolution" was identified with improvement. It was clear to European thinkers at that time -- in
the wake of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution -- that human societies evolved; many people have claimed the same about
the evolution of biological species. In the 20th century, most social scientists came to reject the strict identification of
social and cultural change with improvement (see also social
evolution and cultural evolution); most interpretations of
Darwin's account of evolution similarly argue against identifying
biological changes with improvement.
Since the 19th century "evolution" is generally used in reference to
biological evolution, the development of the different varieties of living
things over generations. Often it is shorthand for the modern theory of evolution of species based upon Darwin's idea of natural selection.
The current dominant theory of evolution is known as the "modern evolutionary synthesis" (or simply "modern synthesis"), referring to the synthesis of
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection and Mendel's theory of
the gene. According to this theory, the fundamental event of speciation is the genetic
isolation of two populations, which allows their gene pools to diverge. Since the modern synthesis, biological evolution has been defined as changes in allele frequencies in a population from one generation to another. The remainder of this article
addresses biological evolution.
Scientific theory
The commonly accepted scientific theory
about how life has changed since it originated has three major
aspects.
- The common descent of all organisms from (more or less) a single ancestor.
- The origin of novel traits in a lineage.
- The mechanisms that cause some traits to persist while others perish.
Ancestry of organisms
Most biologists believe in common descent: that all life on Earth is
descended from one common ancestor. This conclusion is based upon the fact that many traits of living organisms, such as the
genetic code, seem arbitrary yet are shared by all organisms. Some have
suggested that life may have had more than one origin, but the high degree of commonality argues strongly against multiple
origins.
The study of the ancestry of species is phylogeny. Phylogeny has revealed that organs with radically different internal structures can bear a superficial
resemblance and perform similar functions. These examples of analogous structures show that there are multiple ways to
solve most problems and make it difficult to believe that the universal traits of life are all necessary. Likewise other organs
with similar internal structures will perform radically different functions. Vertebrate limbs are a favorite example of homologous structures, organs on two organisms that share a
basic structure that had existed in the last common ancestor of the organisms.
Further evidence of the universal ancestry of life is that abiogenesis has
never been observed under controlled conditions, indicating that the origin
of life from non-life, is either very rare or only happens under conditions that are not at all like those of modern
earth.
The emergence of novel traits
If life is to change, then new traits must emerge at some point. Geneticists
have studied how traits emerge and are passed to succeeding generations. In Darwin's time, there was no widely accepted in-depth
mechanism for heritability. However, it is now known that most inherited variation can be traced to discrete, persistent entities
called "genes", which are aspects of a linear molecule called DNA. Alterations in DNA, known as mutations, have been observed to alter
traits. Furthermore, DNA variants may have little phenotypic effect in isolation
but create new traits when combined in an organism through genetic recombination. Genetic recombination is produced both by the fusion of cells of opposite mating types (such as human sex), and by the transfer of
material into an intact cell (such as bacterial conjugation and
transformation).
Researchers are also investigating heritable variation that is not connected to variations in DNA sequence that influence
standard DNA replication. The processes that produce this variation leave the genetic information intact and are often
reversible. These are often referred to as epigenetic
inheritance and may include phenomenon such as DNA methylation, prions, and structural inheritance. Investigations continue into whether
these mechanisms allow for the production of specific beneficial heritable variation in response to environmental signals. If
this is shown to be the case, then some instances of evolution would lie outside of the framework that Darwin established, which
avoided any connection between environmental signals and the production of heritable variation. In general, Darwin knew little
about the nature or source of heritable variation.
In addition to the mechanisms described above, the origin of novel traits may also be attributable to self-organizing properties at the level of the physics and chemistry of the organism (which some hold to be
a violation of "strict" Darwinism). Self-organization in this context would refer to traits that were not directly encoded in the
genome but rather would always expected to be present in a wide class of particular biological systems (see the section
Neo-structuralist themes in evolutionary theory in the current article). In this view, most cogently expressed by
Stuart Kauffman, natural selection "selects" only particular classes
of systems, which happen to include systems which generate such "order for free" (Kauffman also calls this property
"anti-chaos"). Several specific mechanisms to enable "order for free" such as the robustness of genetic regulatory networks, the
spontaneous self-sustaining order of chemical reactions as autocatalytic
sets and the properties of the RNA genotype-to-phenotype map (in this case, the RNA-sequence-to-RNA-shape mapping), have been
cautiously incorporated as part of a workable theory as it applies to evolution. However, the entire program as outlined by
Kauffman remains a matter for debate.
The foregoing potential sources of novel traits are not mutually exclusive, and most biologists would accept that each
mechanism discussed has been demonstrated to be a possible way to generate such traits; however each would most likely assign
different degrees of importance to each of the different mechanisms.
Microevolution and macroevolution
Main articles: Microevolution, Macroevolution
Microevolution refers to small-scale changes in gene-frequencies in
a population over a few generations (population genetics is
the branch of biology that provides the mathematical structure for the study of the process of microevolution). These changes may
be due to a number of processes: mutation, gene flow, genetic drift, as well as natural selection. Macroevolution refers to large-scale changes in gene-frequencies in a population over a long period of time
(and may culminate in the evolution of new species). The difference between the two
is hard to distinguish because, over time, successive tiny mutations like those evidenced in microevolution could build up in
isolated populations and eventually create entirely new genera, which is known as macroevolution. While microevolution has been
demonstrated in the laboratory to the satisfaction of most observers, macroevolution has to be inferred from the fossil record, and its precise mechanisms are an active topic of discussion
amongst scientists.
Differential survival of traits
Differential survival of characteristics that arise in the population means that some will become more frequent while others
may be lost. Two processes are generally thought to contribute to the survival of a characteristic:
Natural selection
Main article: Natural selection
Darwinism and its descendant theories state that biological evolution results through natural selection. Since natural selection is so important to Darwinism and modern theories of evolution,
a very short summary of its main points follows:
- Organisms have children that inherit genes from their parents. These genes code for different characteristics in a person.
Genetically, a child has 50% the DNA of each parent. However, depending on how the genotypes are inherited, the phenotypes may be manifested in
different ways. The genotype is the basic code of the gene, and the phenotype is what is expressed in the individual. Two
brown-eyed parents may be heterozygous for the eye color allele and end up having a child with the blue eyed phenotype. In plain English, kids are like
mom and dad, though the mechanisms through which this occurs can get very complicated.
- Organisms have differing reproductive (sexual) success based on their traits in a given environment. In plain English,
animals (or plants) that are good at what they do are more likely to survive and have kids.
- Therefore, over time, the types of organisms that have traits better adapted to their environment will tend to become the dominant ones in an environment, while organisms poorly
adapted to their environment will become extinct.
Natural selection also provides for a mechanism by which life
can sustain itself over time. Since, in the long run, environments always change, if successive generations did not develop
adaptations which allowed them to survive and reproduce, species would simply die out as their biological niches die out.
Therefore, life is allowed to persist over great spans of time, in the form of evolving species. The central role of natural
selection in evolutionary theory has created a strong connection between that field and the study of ecology.
Genetic drift
Main article: Genetic drift
Genetic drift describes changes in gene frequency that cannot be ascribed to selective pressures, but are due instead to
events that are unrelated to inherited traits. This is especially important in small mating populations, which simply cannot have
enough offspring to maintain the same gene distribution as the parental generation. Such fluctuations in gene frequency between
successive generations may result in some genes disappearing from the population. Two separate populations that begin with the
same gene frequency might, therefore, "drift" by random fluctuation into two divergent populations with different gene sets (i.e.
genes that are present in one have been lost in the other). Rare sporadic events (volcanic explosion, meteor impact, etc.) might
contribute to genetic drift by altering the gene frequency outside of "normal" selective pressures.
Probable Mutation Effect
Main article: Probable Mutation Effect
The Probable Mutation Effect is a proposed mechanism whereby structures that may have been beneficial to an organism become,
for one reason or another, unimportant to its survival. Consequently the genes controlling this structure will degenerate through
the acquisition of deleterious mutations, as they are no longer under selective pressure.
Creationism and evolution
Main article: Creationism
Creationists believe in a creator, most often the God of the Abrahamic religions. They propose that this Supreme Being acted
intentionally and with purpose in establishing his creation through supernatural means. This contrasts with theories of evolution, of which most formulations do not assume or
require any past or present supernatural events.
Ever since Darwin provided the first cogent mechanism for evolution,
religious fundamentalists have claimed that the theory is false and
that a supreme being was responsible for creation of the species. This view is commonly referred to as "creationism". In response
to world-wide scientific acceptance of the evolutionary process as a fact, more moderate views have emerged where God only
provides a divine spark to make evolution happen (Evolutionary Creationism). Christians, Jews and Muslims who
reject evolution point to the Bible and the Quran
to support their views and have offered what they believe to be proof of the impossibility of macroevolution in particular. These arguments and their presentation as science are not accepted by
the mainstream scientific community. In spite of this, creationists in the United States have succeeded in convincing some state governments to give "equal time" to their views in the
classroom.
Creationists contend that the explanatory power of the theory of evolution should be evaluated and studied critically.
(See for example Disclaimer Adopted by Oklahoma Textbook Commission )
Development of evolutionary theories
Status of evolution as a theory
When talking about biological evolution, there is often confusion about the question of whether or not modern
organisms have evolved (and are continuing to change) from older ancestral organisms and there are questions about the mechanism
of the observed changes.
It is a fact that the frequency of traits changes in populations of organisms. Most biologists believe that this process can
account for the differences between existing species, but the relative importance of the various mechanisms continues to be
debated. The commonly accepted scientific theory today is known as modern synthesis (or the Neo-Darwinian synthesis),
based primarily on Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection, but updated with newer discoveries in biology and
genetics, in particular Mendelian inheritance. Population genetics is the branch of biology that provides the
mathematical structure for the modern synthesis.
In popular usage, "the" theory of evolution refers to this or other Darwinian theories. However, within this framework there
are still differences of opinion, for example between punctuated equilibrium and strict gradualism or
regarding the relative importance of natural selection and
genetic drift.
Fossil evidence
The theory of evolution tells us that differential reproduction rates result in very small but persistent changes in the
phenotype of a population. Given enough time an isolated population will become an entirely new species. All species, as
described by this model, are in a state of transition. However, it is extremely difficult to find examples of gradual change in
the fossil record. The work of Mendel, Darwin and Watson/Crick makes an elegant argument for evolution. The lack of fossil
evidence introduces complexity and fascination.
History of the idea
The idea of biological evolution has existed since ancient times, but the modern theory wasn't established until the 18th and
19th centuries, with scientists such as Lamarck and Charles Darwin. Darwin greatly emphasized the difference between his two main inputs: establishing the
fact of evolution, and proposing a theory, natural selection, to
explain the mechanism of evolution.
As science has uncovered more and more information about the basic operations of life, such as genetics and molecular biology,
theories of evolution have changed. The general trend has been not to overturn well-supported theories, but to supplant them with
more detailed and therefore more complex ones.
While transmutation was accepted by a sizeable number of scientists before 1859, it was
the publication of Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species which provided the first cogent
mechanism by which evolutionary change could persist: his mechanism of natural selection. The evolutionary
timeline outlines the major steps of evolution on Earth as expounded by this theory's proponents.
Following the dawn of molecular biology, it became clear that
a major mechanism for variation within a population is the mutagenesis of
DNA. An essential component to evolutionary theory is that during the cell cycle, DNA is copied very, but not entirely, faithfully. When these rare copying
errors occur, they are said to introduce genetic mutations of three general consequences relative to the current environment:
good, bad, or neutral. By definition, individuals with "good" mutations will be more likely to propagate, individuals with "bad"
mutations will have less of a chance at successful reproduction, and those carrying "neutral" mutations will have neither an
advantage nor a disadvantage. These definitions assume that the environment remains stable. Considered at the level of a single
gene, these variations just described represent different genetic alleles. Following environmental change, alleles may retain their classification of good, bad, or neutral,
or may shift into one of the other categories. Individuals carrying alleles formerly classified as neutral may now be "good" as
they bear favourably adaptive mutations. Since neutral alleles can accumulate in the population without consequence while an
environment is stable, they create a considerable reservoir for adaptability.
Recent developments in evolutionary theory
Symbiogenesis
Main article: Symbiogenesis
Another extension to the standard modern synthesis, advocated by Lynn
Margulis, is symbiogenesis. Symbiogenesis argues that acquisition and accumulation of random mutations or genetic drift are not sufficient to explain
how new inherited variations occur in evolution. This theory states that species arise from the merger of
independent organisms through symbiosis. Symbiogenesis emphasizes the impact of
co-operation rather than Darwinian competition. This commonly occurs in
multigenomic organisms throughout nature.
Neo-structuralist themes in evolutionary theory
In the 1980s and 1990s there was a renewal of
structuralist themes in evolutionary biology by biologists such as
Brian Goodwin, that
incorporates ideas from cybernetics and systems theory, and that emphasizes the role of self-organized processes as being at least as important as the role of natural selection. Some extreme variants consider natural selection as the result of biological
evolution and not its cause, though most neo-structuralist biologists would not
go this far.
The evolution of altruism
Main article: Altruism
Altruism has been one of the last (and most deeply embedded) thorns in the side
of evolutionary theory, but recent developments in game theory have suggested explanations with an evolutionary context. If humans evolved, then so did human minds, and if minds
evolved, then so does behaviour - including, according to these models, altruistic tendencies.
Theories of eusociality and the undoubted advantages of kin selection have made good progress in this direction, but they are far from
unproblematic. Some writers have pointed out that the conscience is just
another aspect of our mental behaviour, and propose an evolutionary explanation for the existence of conscience and therefore
altruism. One recent suggestion, expressed most eloquently by the philosopher Daniel Dennett, was initially developed when considering the problem of so-called 'free riders' in the
tragedy of the commons, a larger-scale version of the
Prisoner's Dilemma.
An interesting example of altruism is found in the cellular slime molds,
such as Dictyostelium mucoroides. These protists live as individual amoebae
until starved, at which point they aggregate and form a multicellular fruiting body in which some cells sacrifice themselves to
promote the survival of other cells in the fruiting body.
De Chardin's and Huxley's theories
Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and Julian Huxley formulated theories describing the gradual development of the
Universe from subatomic particles to human society, considered by Teilhard as the last stage. (see Gaia theory). These are not generally recognized as scientifically rigorous.
Nine levels are described (scheme ), the "classical" biological stages being levels 6, 7
& 8 of the universal evolution. Stages 1 to 5 are grouped into the Lithosphere, also called Geosphere or Physiosphere, where (the progress of) the
structure of the organisms is ruled by structure, mechanical laws and coincidence. Stages 6 to 8 are grouped into the Biosphere, where (the progress of) the structure of the organisms is ruled by genetical
mechanisms. The actual stage, stage 9, is called the Noosphere, where (the
progress of) the structure of human society (socialization) is ruled by psychological, informational and communicative
processes.
Links and references
Bibliography
See also
People
Famous evolution researchers and popularizers include:
External links
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