Diversity and Adaptation Explained
Diversity and adaptation are features of our
world that demand explanation. The only
explanation that is consistent with the range of scientific observations made
over the past several hundred years in biology, geology and chemistry is the
Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection.
This scientific theory was originally formulated in the late 1800's by
Charles Darwin and, simultaneously, by Alfred Russell Wallace (for a good
description of the historical context within which the ideas about evolution by
natural selection were developed, see Futuyma, 1998, Ch. 2).
The process of evolution and its basis as an
explanation for diversity and adaptation is twofold. First, evolution is a change over time in either the kinds of
species present on the Earth, or in their characteristics. Such changes can be clearly documented. For example, some types of organisms present
in fossil layers deposited 400 million years ago have never been found in rocks
that were formed more recently. In
turn, many fossilized forms found in more recent sediments are never seen
together with the kinds of fossils found in older sediments. For example, we know from fossil evidence
that no humans were alive at the time of the dinosaurs - dinosaurs and humans
are never found in rocks of the same age.
This is evidence for evolutionary change in the composition of species
over time.
Secondly, evolution is characterized by
descent with modification. This means
that organisms that share a common ancestor will be expected to also share many
characteristics. During descent, however, variability in characters occurs, and
features can (and have) become modified to take on different functions. For example, all life shares a common
genetic code. This is powerful evidence
that we are all descended from a single common ancestor. However, different organisms have very
different genes and/or forms of genes, and these differences in the
"instruction manual" are responsible for many of their physical
differences. This is descent with
modification. A classic example of descent
with modification is the observation that all four-legged vertebrates
(tetrapods) share common bone types in their limbs. Such bones that are similar because of ancestry are called
homologous. Looking at the limbs of
tetrapods as different as bats, dolphins, sheep and humans reveals that the
striking differences among their limbs have been evolved through modification
of the same set of bones into wings, flippers, legs and arms (figure 3 below). This homology of structures with very
different functions among organisms due to descent with modification is
evidence for evolution. For further
evidence of change over time and descent with modification (see the excellent
treatment in Ridley, 199x, Chapter 3).
Figure 3. Homologous
structures in the tetrapod limb, modified for various functions. Notice that
the various bones, which are tinted different colors, have been modified in
different ways to accomplish each type of locomotion (e.g., compare the
modifications of the bones for flight). From Audesirk/Audesirk, BIOLOGY: Life On Earth, 5/e, © 1999. Electronically reproduced by
permission of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Figure
14-8.
Evolution is a
fact. We can observe change over time
and descent with modification. So why
do we call the process that leads to diversity and adaptation the Theory of
Evolution by Natural Selection? In
science, a theory is "a statement of a natural law... QED". A scientific theory is not just a casual
idea, or a set of untested hypotheses, but is instead a well-tested explanation
of the natural laws that cause observed facts on Earth. To put the Theory of Evolution by Natural
Selection into a context, another scientific theory that we all experience each
day is the Theory of Gravitation. This
theory explains why my keys fall to the floor when they are dropped. The explanation for the observation that the
keys fall is based on well tested and thoroughly substantiated knowledge of the
causes (and effects) of gravity on the Earth.
The explanation of the observations of change over time and descent with
modification in the biological world is the similarly well tested and
substantiated Theory of Evolution by Natural Selection. For further discussion on evolution as fact
and theory, see Futuyma (1998, Ch. 1).
Contributed by: Dr. Sara Via
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