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Member (Idle past 1494 days) Posts: 19762 From: Silver Spring, MD Joined: |
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Author | Topic: Wells' Icons of Evolution - Peppered Moths | |||||||||||||||||||||||
zephyr Member (Idle past 4577 days) Posts: 821 From: FOB Taji, Iraq Joined: |
quote:So, what is your alternative explanation for the correlation between environmental change and allele frequency change? Natural selection is easy to infer, even if the exact factors are uncertain - the environment changed, allele frequency followed. Environment returned to previous state, allele frequency returned as well. I'd like to hear your theory explaining this. I'm sure everyone would.
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JonF Member (Idle past 195 days) Posts: 6174 Joined: |
If you read my first thread,you will see that i don't deny that something has caused the change over of dominant variants.This fact is undeniable.Wells points to it being something yet undiscovered,but due to pollutants.I am saying that it is not happening through the mechanism of natural selection.I am not saying its a fake.but i'm merely saying that the data does not prove that it can be natural selection and that other contributory factors have not been considered. Nothing is ever proved in science. The best explanation that we have, which fits all the data and does not fail to fit any of the data, is natural selection. We have enough data to be virtually certian (though not absolutely certain) that natural selection is operating. Note that the article to which I pointed you contains data which refutes your claim that there's not enough time for natural selection. There is the possibility of other contributory factors, and research is ongoing. When you or Wells come up with a theory that fits the data, does not fail to fit any of the data, and explains the data better than nautural selection, we'll talk. Or, when you or Wells come up with data, not just incredulity, that falsifies natural selection in this case, we'll talk. Unti then, we'll continue to point to the peppered moth changes as natural selection at work. If you want to discuss this further, let's see your data and your calculations. Personal incredulity just doesn't cut it.
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Loudmouth Inactive Member |
quote: Just for exercise, and with the caveat that I haven't seen the actual number of trees observed, lets pretend that the research group looked at 1000 trees over that same time period. Lets then pretend that there are approx 1 million trees that are habitat for the moth and affected by pollution. That would mean that there are 1000 moths open to predation by 74 days (extrapolated from your 1 moth per 74 days on my possible 1000 trees). This would mean approx. 20,000 moths per year, and 1 million moths over 50 years. Also, the mercury light traps did not cover the entire tree. Just for a guess, maybe 10% of the tree. This moves our number up to 10 million moths over 50 years. If the traps only covered 1% of the tree, taking into account smaller twigs and branches, then the number is up to 100 million moths over 50 years. So let's call it between 10 to 100 million so far. I am making quite a few assumptions in the above calculations, so feel free to criticize my numbers. But 10-100 million sounds pretty good to me.
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cromwell Inactive Member |
I haven’t got time to reply to all of the questions fired at me (I should be working.)However you have formulated some good ideas,calculations and something substantial to work on.I was though basing my ideas on far lower figures than yours.I was thinking of pocketedlarge amounts of trees around polluted areas affected by the pollution that cut down the lichen cover on the trees,but not trees in the millions.
The trees used in experimentation were near industrial areas,observed for obvious reasons.Outside of these areas trees were generally unaffected,so there was no need to use them in the experiments.Some of the maps on the informative website links indicate this,but there doesn't seem to be any indepth details. So would you say that polluted trees are isolated along with the cities and large towns? When you look at aerial photo’s they are like islands amongst the greenery.I ask these questions for your view and not to be argumentativeIf we look at a time period around the turn of the century as a point of time to work on.Would you agree that dark dominant peppered moths were in a sense,restricted within these polluted wooded areas because outside more light dominant moths were prevalent? Do you think that moths limited within an isolated woodland area would hinder the rate of progression to obtain large amounts of peppered moths? Do you think that peppered moths being active during,approx,half a year will affect the figures? The predation ratio of moths seen and those that actually become prey is a "grey" area and i'm not in total agreement with the average of 1 moth seen resting or trapped every 74 days,(based on mercury vapour light traps) as a reasonable average.I tend to think that nature as seen in the wild without unatural intervention is not indicative of true nature,especially if we are assuming "natural selection" as the mechanism to select naturally. I think a lot of this comes down to the amount of lichen covered trees affected by pollutants and how many trees had lichen in the first place.I’ll look on the net to see if there was any studies on this matter.Maybe looking at the early part of this century.
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cromwell Inactive Member |
>>Nature as seen in the wild without unatural intervention.<<.... should read as >> Nature as seen in the wild with unatural intervention.<<
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MarkAustin Member (Idle past 3842 days) Posts: 122 From: London., UK Joined: |
quote:quote: Nonsense. Evolutionary changes have been observed over much smaller timescales. Look at the work on Darwin's Finches by Peter and Rosemary Grant. They clearly demonstrated quite rapid changes over quite short times in response to environmental changes. However, normally, the environment changes around a norm, so, averaged over the long-term, no change is observed.
quote: But, I repeat if natural selection regardless of cause is not happening, what is? Increasingly. this looks like an argument from personal incredulity. Predation is so central to evoilutionary pressure that, at first sight, it would be the obvious cause of selection. Even with the doubts expressed recently (which, let it be noted, does not include the infamous photographs, which have always been know to be illustrative of the camoflage effect of the two type of colouration, although, admittedly, some secondary sources have omitted this information), predator pressure is still considered the most likely cause, but more work needs to be done to eastablish this.
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Percy Member Posts: 22499 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 4.9 |
JonF writes: The best explanation that we have, which fits all the data and does not fail to fit any of the data, is natural selection. We have enough data to be virtually certian (though not absolutely certain) that natural selection is operating. I'm curious about the degree to which we've really established natural selection as the causative factor. For example, has the possibility that something in the pollutants is interacting with moth metabolism been eliminated? Or have the affected alleles been identified? If the anwers to such possibilities is no, then I don't think we can say with any certainty that natural selection was responsible. --Percy
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John Paul Inactive Member |
The pepper moth issue is NOT where they rest on trees and not if it is an example of natural selection. What is needed is data showing that random mutations culled by NS led to the variations. Also the bottom line is that peppered or not it is still a moth.
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Percy Member Posts: 22499 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 4.9 |
John Paul writes: What is needed is data showing that random mutations culled by NS led to the variations. If natural selection is responsible for the color change, then it is likely due to selection for existing alleles that control coloration, not through production of new alleles by mutation. I don't think anyone on this thread is arguing that random mutations are responsible (according to the results of a search I just did, you're the first to use the term "mutation" in this thread), so it makes no sense to raise this issue.
Also the bottom line is that peppered or not it is still a moth. The discussion isn't about speciation, but about whether the peppered moth is a legitimate example of natural selection in nature. --Percy
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Dan Carroll Inactive Member |
quote: If I'm not mistaken, (and I might be,) wouldn't the only thing you have to do to check that is remove two moths from the environment, and see if they have peppered babies? I mean... change from pollutants wouldn't pass on to their offspring, would it? "As the days go by, we face the increasing inevitability that we are alone in a godless, uninhabited, hostile and meaningless universe. Still, you've got to laugh, haven't you?" -Holly
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John Paul Inactive Member |
Percy, From all of my discussions with evolutionists (not counting this thread) and Creationists, no one disgrees that the moth story is an example of natural selection. But NS alone can't account for any change. And as for NS a Creationist named Ed Blythe wrote about it many years before Darwin did...
All I was trying to do with my post is to clarify the position of Creationists on this moth issue.
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Percy Member Posts: 22499 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 4.9 |
John Paul writes: Percy, From all of my discussions with evolutionists (not counting this thread) and Creationists, no one disgrees that the moth story is an example of natural selection. Actually, I believe the Creationists on this thread are arguing precisely that, that the peppered moth has *not* been shown to be an example of natural selection in nature. And until someone presents evidence demonstrating otherwise, I agree with them. You raise some other interesting issues, such as that NS can't account for change, or that Ed Blythe conceived of NS before Darwin, or that speciation doesn't happen, and those seem like good issues for other threads. --Percy
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jt Member (Idle past 5623 days) Posts: 239 From: Upper Portion, Left Coast, United States Joined: |
Percy writes:
quote:Natural selection can't acount for changes. According to webster's dictionary, NS is quote:NS cannot does not change anything, all it does is select that which is best adapted. If beneficial changes happened, NS would probably keep them, but NS wouldn't be responsible for the change. P.S. I'm not sure if you were saying that NS changes things, but I wanted to make sure it was clear. Apoligies if I set up a pointless strawman
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Percy Member Posts: 22499 From: New Hampshire Joined: Member Rating: 4.9 |
You quoted me enumerating JP's assertions. Having been involved in discussions with JP previously, I'm pretty sure I know what he means. I don't think anyone is misconstruing the nature of NS.
--Percy
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jt Member (Idle past 5623 days) Posts: 239 From: Upper Portion, Left Coast, United States Joined: |
Ok. Sorry about the strawman
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