The Contingency of Evolution: What Determines the Outcome?
Earthly organisms must be made from materials
that are present on Earth.
Natural selection favors the individuals in a population that survive
and reproduce the best relative to others present, in the current
environment. The italics in
the previous sentences highlight the three main contingencies of evolution:
1) Only certain materials were present
in the early Earth to serve as raw materials for life. 2) Natural selection is limited by the range
of possible biological variation and by the variation present at a particular
time, and 3) The environmental
circumstances at a given time determine the characteristics favored by natural
selection. Changes in the environment
lead to changes in the type of characteristics that are favored. The outcome of the evolutionary process is
determined by these three contingencies.
Thus, it is worth examining them in more detail to determine whether we
can reasonably expect the evolutionary outcome that has occurred so far on our
Earth to be similar to the outcome of an evolutionary process in another world.
1) The outcome of evolution
depends on the materials available at the start of life. The elements that
were common on Earth at the time that life was thought to have originated were
carbon (C), hydrogen (H), oxygen (O),
nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P) and sulfur (S).
All biological molecules are combinations of these fundamental elements. Presumably, during the early years of the
Earth's history, many different kinds of combinations of these fundamental
elements occurred under various physical circumstances. Eventually, the
molecules we know as nucleotides were formed, and then they combined into
self-replicating RNA-based forms called ribozymes. If we take the ability to self-replicate as the defining feature
of life, then these ribozymes were probably the first life on Earth. Further modifications led to the formation
of the true nucleic acids (RNA and DNA).
DNA is a giant polymer with a sugar-phosphate backbone of nucleotides
and nitrogenous "rungs" made of different combinations of C, N, H and
O. DNA forms the universal genetic code
of information used by all life. RNA
then plays a key role in the transfer of information from the DNA to the
proteins that are the building blocks of every organism's body.
Once the trial and error process of early
biochemistry produced self-replicating RNA, then it appears likely that the
evolution of DNA as the genetic code may have occurred quite rapidly. At that point, other types of
self-replicating molecules that could possibly have occurred were at a
disadvantage, because a self-replicating system that worked was already
beginning to dominate the use of resources.
So, the first main contingency of life on Earth may be the genetic code
itself on which all life is based.
Though it is probably not the only way that information could be coded
in a molecule, it is the way that became established on the early Earth, and
nothing has come along to supplant it.
Another influence of the early materials present
on Earth was the fact that water is the universal solvent. Water has very special chemical properties
that we largely take for granted, and these properties have dramatically shaped
the chemistry of biological life. It is
important to recognize, however, that water is not the only possible
solvent. Life based on a different set
of initial elements, and a different solvent, might be entirely different than
the life we know on Earth.
2) Natural selection can only
act on biological variation that is present at a given time.
Most characteristics of organisms that matter to survival and reproduction can
be described in a given population by an average value and a range of genetic
variation around the current average.
Evolution proceeds when natural selection favors certain variants that
survive or reproduce better than others within their environment, and thus
contribute more than their share of progeny to the next generation. This process of differential survival and
reproduction of individuals with different characteristics leads to a change in
the average value of characters so that the population comes to look more like
the favored variants (change over time and descent with modification). The key here is that this variation involves
slight differences from the current average.
Thus, descent with modification means that as evolution proceeds, the
average characteristics are modified into new forms. The modifications of the bones in the vertebrate limb for very
different functions (figure 3) are an example of this type of evolutionary
change. Even a huge evolutionary step
like the colonization of land probably proceeded in this way, when a few
lobe-finned fishes began to spend time scooting along muddy shores on their
weak fins. Later lineages show
modifications of this crude beginning of terrestriality, leading to the
amphibians (only partially terrestrial), and later to the fully terrestrial
reptiles. Change over time and descent
with modification can be seen clearly in the evolution of terrestrial
vertebrates.
Rarely, a variant form that is radically
different appears in a population - one that does not fit within in the usual
distribution of variation. Such
radically different forms may have been very important in the evolution of
major innovations during the history of life.
It is probable, however, that the first occurrence of a major new
characteristic was only a crude version of its final evolutionary form that
permitted organisms to take on a new function and that was then further modified
by natural selection acting on small variations.
The key point here is that if a variant is
not produced for some reason, that characteristic cannot and will not evolve in
real populations, no matter how advantageous it might be. For example, it would be handy for large
mammals to construct their skeletons from titanium instead of bone. This would allow a much lighter weight
skeleton, and would probably permit the evolution of much larger body sizes,
since the size of terrestrial vertebrates is largely limited by the strength of
bone. However, titanium is not a
material that is used by organisms (with the exception of a few prokaryotes,
which appear to use almost every element on Earth, see the next chapter). Thus, a variant within a mammal population
that has a titanium skeleton is highly unlikely to ever appear. Instead, the best-working form of a skeleton
that can be made with biological materials will be favored by natural
selection.
3) The environmental
circumstances at a given time determine the form of natural selection and thus
the outcome of evolution. Natural selection is the differential survival or reproduction of
individuals within a particular population in a particular set of environmental
circumstances. No single set of
characteristics is universally favored in all organisms, because the characters
that lead to high survival in one situation will not necessarily lead to good
survival in a different environment. As
the evolution of life on Earth has proceeded, there have been changes in the
environment due to periodic physical changes on Earth. Radical climate changes have been caused by
movement of the continents. Changes in
orbital cycles and the earth's tilt have led to ice ages and dramatic changes
in sea level. These enormous physical
events have led, in some cases, to major extinctions, and they have certainly
affected the characters that have been favored in organisms at particular
times. Even more importantly, life has
changed its own environment. As living
things have diversified, they have become inextricably part of one another's
environments. Consider the first life
on land, colonizing bare rock. Soil was
formed as the first bacterial colonists died and decomposed. This allowed plants to take root, whose
decomposing bodies further added to the soilbuilding process. The evolution of flowering plants on land
has provided not only food but also habitat for many different kinds of
terrestrial organisms. The diversity of
insects, for example, would not be at current levels, were it not for the
diversity of flowering plants that have evolved. In turn, plant diversity has increased due to the effects of the
insects themselves on speciation. In
life on Earth, many species evolve together ("coevolve"). They acts as part of one another's
environment, determining for each other the characteristics that lead to high
levels of survival and reproduction.
Contributed by: Dr. Sara Via
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