persephone1
Member
- Feb 5, 2006
- 28
- 0
- 0
Everything is competing for survival with well...their life. So you stress the conditions enough, you get selection for even tiny bit better suited stuff coming out.
Originally posted by: E equals MC2
I'm talking about a simple micro evolution within species. (P&N stay away!)
As you know in Galapagos (sp) island, certain birds have developed a specific curvy beak in order to drink honey from flowers with deep petals.
How is the information to 'morph' passed down to its offsprings then?
In more simple words, how does the bird start to develop a curved beak? They have no direct control of how their offsprings will be shaped physically... Does the body happen to know? If so, how?
As we know, just because we try something really hard in our lives, doesn't mean our children will be more 'adaptable' physically. (I know it's an extreme example as we are humans.)
Originally posted by: destrekor
basically... like a frog that has 5 legs, is a mutation.... we all know this... and it isn't beneficial to the frog either. but thats why they typically don't get a mate or the gene just doesn't get passed along as its not a vital gene mutation, and sometimes its a fatal mutation anyway as it may limit the ability to survive.
but every now and then there is a mutation that just seems to provide an edge for the creature. like the giraffe example, the longer neck was a freak genetic mutation (in the first place) but it provided an edge for getting food and fared better compared to other giraffes... thus, it passed along its mutated genes.
i got that right.. right?
Originally posted by: E equals MC2
So.. how does this explain the evolutions BETWEEN species? A briefly land-hopping fish to amphibian to lizard to warm blooded animals...
Survival of the fittest doesn't quite explain this here.
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: goku
Originally posted by: djheater
This is the reason evolution needs to be taught in school. PROPERLY. My 8 year old has a better grasp of it than OP.
fixed
Eh, is it really important for most people? I'd rather have them spend more time teaching science that has real-world applications for most people, i.e. physics.
Edit: Not saying evolution shouldn't be taught in school.
Originally posted by: goku
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: goku
Originally posted by: djheater
This is the reason evolution needs to be taught in school. PROPERLY. My 8 year old has a better grasp of it than OP.
fixed
Eh, is it really important for most people? I'd rather have them spend more time teaching science that has real-world applications for most people, i.e. physics.
Edit: Not saying evolution shouldn't be taught in school.
YES
The people who can't understand that being in an SUV is NOT safer deserve to die.
The people who know nothing about evolution or are bible thumpers don't necessarily deserve to continue to be ignorant. I haven't taken physics but I know a SUV isn't safer than a car..
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Actually physics would teach that an SUV is safer.. or heavier vehicles.
My professor countered this by saying that the truth to cars safety is their price. The higher the price, the more safety features are usually included.
How often have you seen someone dying in a car accident from driving one of those featherweight plastic ferraris?
Originally posted by: jagec
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Actually physics would teach that an SUV is safer.. or heavier vehicles.
My professor countered this by saying that the truth to cars safety is their price. The higher the price, the more safety features are usually included.
How often have you seen someone dying in a car accident from driving one of those featherweight plastic ferraris?
Bad example...you'd be surprised at how often they get crashed on a per-mile basis. Remember, there are few of them, and they're usually garaged.
IIRC, the Toyota Avalon is the "safest" vehicle in terms of deaths/mile. This is a reflection both of the safety of the vehicle, and the type of driver. SUVs aren't more dangerous than cars using that criteria (or safer either), but they DO kill the other driver a lot more. I wish I could find that study...
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: E equals MC2
So.. how does this explain the evolutions BETWEEN species? A briefly land-hopping fish to amphibian to lizard to warm blooded animals...
Survival of the fittest doesn't quite explain this here.
I'll refer you to an example above: chihuahuas vs. great danes. Yeah, they're still the same species, but look at how different they are from one another. Yet, they share a common ancester from about 20,000 years ago. That's an incredibly short amount of time compared to the time living things have been on earth. Imagine how different they'll look after another 20,000 years. And, then another 20 thousand years. After 100 of these twenty thousand year periods, you'll be up to 20 million years. The entire history of life on this planet is much longer than that.
Originally posted by: Fenixgoon
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
genetic variation has to come from somewhere though
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
Yup.
The best shaped beaks gets the food, and survives to pass their genes on. So gradually, the beaks start to differentiate to adapt to their diet.
Originally posted by: Legend
Originally posted by: Fenixgoon
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
genetic variation has to come from somewhere though
So everyone's kid has the EXACT same features as the parents?
Here's a real world example of accelerated evolution: dog breeding.
Originally posted by: chambersc
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
Yup.
The best shaped beaks gets the food, and survives to pass their genes on. So gradually, the beaks start to differentiate to adapt to their diet.
Ok, I have a question with this, then.
You state that the curvy beak is inherently in the genes of the birds and that the birds with the curve that fits the flower wins, right? Well, (I'm assuming here) since we've mapped the human genome, wouldn't we be able to detect any dormant genes that could possibly speed up/halt evolution? Thusly, haven't we conquered evolution?
Originally posted by: chambersc
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
Yup.
The best shaped beaks gets the food, and survives to pass their genes on. So gradually, the beaks start to differentiate to adapt to their diet.
Ok, I have a question with this, then.
You state that the curvy beak is inherently in the genes of the birds and that the birds with the curve that fits the flower wins, right? Well, (I'm assuming here) since we've mapped the human genome, wouldn't we be able to detect any dormant genes that could possibly speed up/halt evolution? Thusly, haven't we conquered evolution?
Originally posted by: Noema
By the way, the philosopher Danniel Dennet has a couple of books about the subject, which I also recommend. In Darwin's Dangerous Idea he calls the theory of evolution "The best idea anyone has ever had".
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: Noema
By the way, the philosopher Danniel Dennet has a couple of books about the subject, which I also recommend. In Darwin's Dangerous Idea he calls the theory of evolution "The best idea anyone has ever had".
That is an excellent book, but it is FAR from a intro....definitely read the blind watchmaker first. "The selfish gene" is also quite interesting, but I get the impression than 90% of people who read it misinterpret it because of the terrible title.
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: chambersc
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
Yup.
The best shaped beaks gets the food, and survives to pass their genes on. So gradually, the beaks start to differentiate to adapt to their diet.
Ok, I have a question with this, then.
You state that the curvy beak is inherently in the genes of the birds and that the birds with the curve that fits the flower wins, right? Well, (I'm assuming here) since we've mapped the human genome, wouldn't we be able to detect any dormant genes that could possibly speed up/halt evolution? Thusly, haven't we conquered evolution?
The map of our genome right now is more akin to a map with no legend or markings...we know SOMETHING is there, but we for the most part, don't know exactly what those genes do. It's being filled in as we speak.
And that in and of itself is a VAST oversimplification. It's not as if we have "eye" gene, "leg" gene, etc...its a horrifically complex network of interactions. Even the concept of a "gene" is a vast oversimplification...DNA does amazing things, it is not just "memory" or a "blueprint".
Speeding up/halting evolution implies that it is going somewhere - which it isnt. It has no direction, it did not go from bacteria to fish to man in a directional line...it just does, what it does.
If you're asking whether or not we'll be able to engineer humans to have the most desirable traits for any given environment...it's on the horizon. The very distant horizon...the science will get there, but whether or not it'll actually be allowed to happen in reality is an entirely different story.
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: chambersc
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
Yup.
The best shaped beaks gets the food, and survives to pass their genes on. So gradually, the beaks start to differentiate to adapt to their diet.
Ok, I have a question with this, then.
You state that the curvy beak is inherently in the genes of the birds and that the birds with the curve that fits the flower wins, right? Well, (I'm assuming here) since we've mapped the human genome, wouldn't we be able to detect any dormant genes that could possibly speed up/halt evolution? Thusly, haven't we conquered evolution?
The map of our genome right now is more akin to a map with no legend or markings...we know SOMETHING is there, but we for the most part, don't know exactly what those genes do. It's being filled in as we speak.
And that in and of itself is a VAST oversimplification. It's not as if we have "eye" gene, "leg" gene, etc...its a horrifically complex network of interactions. Even the concept of a "gene" is a vast oversimplification...DNA does amazing things, it is not just "memory" or a "blueprint".
Speeding up/halting evolution implies that it is going somewhere - which it isnt. It has no direction, it did not go from bacteria to fish to man in a directional line...it just does, what it does.
If you're asking whether or not we'll be able to engineer humans to have the most desirable traits for any given environment...it's on the horizon. The very distant horizon...the science will get there, but whether or not it'll actually be allowed to happen in reality is an entirely different story.
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
We actually do have an eye gene, leg gene, etc.
Read up on hox genes. It's a groundbreaking discovery. Scientists basically found this "genetic toolbox". They are able to modify the gene to give a frog a third leg, or an extra eye, or even flip their entire body cavity.
Originally posted by: Noema
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
We actually do have an eye gene, leg gene, etc.
Read up on hox genes. It's a groundbreaking discovery. Scientists basically found this "genetic toolbox". They are able to modify the gene to give a frog a third leg, or an extra eye, or even flip their entire body cavity.
Not really. A gene is not a 'blueprint'. It's more akin to a recipe. The only thing a gene does is code for proteins to be created by the ribosomes to catalyze metabolic processes. Hundreds of different genes in hundreds of different hyper-complex interactions create, at different times of the life of an organism (and mostly during the embrionic process) certain reactions that are translated into phenotypical effects. Of course legs and feet and eyes are product of the genome those interactions between genes (the 'homebox gene families'), but it's naive and vulgar to talk about the 'right eye gene'. If a drosophila gets legs where it should have antenna, it's probably because the interactions between the genes in that particular area are related to the ones that yield their legs.
Saying that there's a gene for this and for that is a gross oversimplification that leads to people thinking about 'the gay gene' or the 'gene of evil' and such.
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: chambersc
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Originally posted by: jagec
No, what happens is that the birds with worse-shaped beaks don't get as much honey, and so they won't be as reproductively successful, and thus won't pass on their genes.
Of course, that doesn't explain the peculiar case of the hyena...
Yup.
The best shaped beaks gets the food, and survives to pass their genes on. So gradually, the beaks start to differentiate to adapt to their diet.
Ok, I have a question with this, then.
You state that the curvy beak is inherently in the genes of the birds and that the birds with the curve that fits the flower wins, right? Well, (I'm assuming here) since we've mapped the human genome, wouldn't we be able to detect any dormant genes that could possibly speed up/halt evolution? Thusly, haven't we conquered evolution?
The map of our genome right now is more akin to a map with no legend or markings...we know SOMETHING is there, but we for the most part, don't know exactly what those genes do. It's being filled in as we speak.
And that in and of itself is a VAST oversimplification. It's not as if we have "eye" gene, "leg" gene, etc...its a horrifically complex network of interactions. Even the concept of a "gene" is a vast oversimplification...DNA does amazing things, it is not just "memory" or a "blueprint".
Speeding up/halting evolution implies that it is going somewhere - which it isnt. It has no direction, it did not go from bacteria to fish to man in a directional line...it just does, what it does.
If you're asking whether or not we'll be able to engineer humans to have the most desirable traits for any given environment...it's on the horizon. The very distant horizon...the science will get there, but whether or not it'll actually be allowed to happen in reality is an entirely different story.
We actually do have an eye gene, leg gene, etc.
Read up on hox genes. It's a groundbreaking discovery. Scientists basically found this "genetic toolbox". They are able to modify the gene to give a frog a third leg, or an extra eye, or even flip their entire body cavity.
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
Originally posted by: Noema
Originally posted by: virtualgames0
We actually do have an eye gene, leg gene, etc.
Read up on hox genes. It's a groundbreaking discovery. Scientists basically found this "genetic toolbox". They are able to modify the gene to give a frog a third leg, or an extra eye, or even flip their entire body cavity.
Not really. A gene is not a 'blueprint'. It's more akin to a recipe. The only thing a gene does is code for proteins to be created by the ribosomes to catalyze metabolic processes. Hundreds of different genes in hundreds of different hyper-complex interactions create, at different times of the life of an organism (and mostly during the embrionic process) certain reactions that are translated into phenotypical effects. Of course legs and feet and eyes are product of the genome those interactions between genes (the 'homebox gene families'), but it's naive and vulgar to talk about the 'right eye gene'. If a drosophila gets legs where it should have antenna, it's probably because the interactions between the genes in that particular area are related to the ones that yield their legs.
Saying that there's a gene for this and for that is a gross oversimplification that leads to people thinking about 'the gay gene' or the 'gene of evil' and such.
As I said.. read up on hox genes before you talk.