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Author | Topic: Favorable Mutations? Help me!! | |||||||||||||||||||||||
John Inactive Member |
quote: Fred, bud, like it or not, sickle cell actually provides an ADVANTAGE for those getting only one copy of the gene-- provided, of course, that one lives in an area infested with malaria. That is exactly how evolution is supposed to work. ------------------
No webpage found at provided URL: www.hells-handmaiden.com
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MarkAustin Member (Idle past 3837 days) Posts: 122 From: London., UK Joined: |
quote: Irrelevant. The new enzyme confers the bacteria an advantage in its current environment. That's all that matters. In any case, now that the enzyme exists, I confidently expect that evolutin will fine-tune it for increasing efficiency. It's also interesting to note that the mutation in question is a frame-shift mutation, adding (as I recall) 1 base to the sequence and thus scambling all the subsequent 3-base "words", a mutation type that creationsists have long claimed to be impossible.
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Fred Williams Member (Idle past 4878 days) Posts: 310 From: Broomfield Joined: |
quote: Yes, I know, you have a very strong faith. If evolution were true, you should be able to document for me a myriad of examples where a mutated enzyme undergoes additional mutation to increase its efficiency. What do you have to offer?
quote: Hmm, I don’t recall reading in any of the creation science literature of this. Can you provide an example? Methinks a retraction is in order
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Itzpapalotl Inactive Member |
There is an obvious genetic signature of positive mutations that can be detected. The test for these positive mutations is:
"The idea behind the test is that if synonymous mutations are essentially neutral because they do not result in a change in a protein, the rate of synonymous site evolution will equal the mutation rate. Nonsynonymous mutations, because they result in a change in a protein product, are more likely to be subject to natural selection. If most nonsynonymous mutations are deleterious, then the rate of nonsynonymous evolution will be lower than neutral rate. If a substantial fraction of nonsynonymous mutations are beneficial, however, the average rate of nonsynonymous evolution can be higher than the neutral rate." This has been detected in many genes, far too many to list them all so here are some of the categories of genes in which beneficial mutations have been detected (each category represents several genes and each gene several beneficial mutations): Host defence genes Parasite response genes Detoxification genes Developmental genes Genes involves in digestion Genes involved in energy metabolism Odour receptors Pigmentation genes Genes involved in reproduction see also the adaptive evolution database: http://www.sbc.su.se/~liberles/TAED3.0/2index.html A large fraction of many genomes are the result of gene duplications which have evolved to become indispensible to many organisms for example here is a list of organisms followed by the number of genes that evolved from duplicates. Of course each dupliucate represents a minimum of 1 beneficical mutation (the original duplication) and invariably several other beneficial mutations that give the duplicate distinct functions from the parent gene. Bacteria:Mycoplasma pneumoniae 298 Helicobacter pylori 266 Haemophilus influenzae 284 Archaea:Archaeoglobus fulgidus 719 Eukarya:Saccharomyces cerevisiae 1858 Caenorhabditis elegans 8971 Drosophila melanogaster 5536 Arabidopsis thaliana 16 574 Homo sapiens 15 343 So that list represents a minimum of 47,272 beneficial mutations! i hope thats enough Ford MJ. Applications of selective neutrality tests to molecular ecology. Mol Ecol. 2002 Aug;11(8):1245-62. Jianzhi Zhang. Evolution by gene duplication: an update. TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution Vol.18 No.6 June 2003
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Fred Williams Member (Idle past 4878 days) Posts: 310 From: Broomfield Joined: |
This is a very interesting post Itzpapalotl.
Here's the problem:
quote: Itzpapalotl, do you agree that the data could also cause the above to be worded this way:
quote: This is not te only problem with your argument, but it's a good place to start.
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Rei Member (Idle past 7035 days) Posts: 1546 From: Iowa City, IA Joined: |
And the answer is, of course, that Malaria has been there for as long as we've been able to tell - so, in short, for west Africa, it is normal, and is thus, *VERY* advantageous. Try harder, Fred!
quote: Of course. If nylon production shuts down, that species will go extinct. And yet, species go extinct constantly whenever their niche is destroyed. Subspecies even more often. The point of evolution is that it Expands To Fill Unused Niches. This proves the point - that bacteria expanded to exploit a source of energy that wasn't being exploited yet. Please tell me that you can see the significance of this, when applied to other situations. If we had a hydrothermal vent ur-cell billions of years ago that was confined to its cluster of vents, and it developed the ability to harness energy from light - even if that meant that it wasn't as effective at getting energy from the hydrothermal vents as well - it would be able to spread and fill all of Earth's temperate oceans. You can apply this to almost any situation. Are you so daft that you can't see the importance of being able to utilize a new food source? Especially one that's very different from your traditional food source? ------------------"Illuminant light, illuminate me."
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Rei Member (Idle past 7035 days) Posts: 1546 From: Iowa City, IA Joined: |
Well, Fred, you just argued for the presence of God's hand in evolution - you're on your way!!!
I find it amazing that you can look at an incredibly simple statement and read God into it. The statement says little more than "if the rate of beneficial mutations rises, the rate of evolution rises". Duh . What, would you read into the sentence "See spot. See spot run!" that it must really be implying "See spot. See spot run because God told him to!"? It no more takes God to raise the rate of beneficial mutations than it takes God to raise the rate that a random number generator produces the number "6". Likewise, it no more takes God to lower the rate of beneficial mutations than it takes God to lower the rate that the random number generator produces the number "6". It is interesting, psychologically, to realize that you equate the words "beneficial" and "non-random". Do you equate them in every context on Earth? ------------------"Illuminant light, illuminate me."
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Rei Member (Idle past 7035 days) Posts: 1546 From: Iowa City, IA Joined: |
quote: Please, Fred, you should be able to do this yourself. Step 1: Go to GoogleStep 2: Type into the search bar the words 'mutation' and 'efficiency' Step 3: Click on the third link - Single mutation at the intersubunit interface confers extra efficiency to Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase - PubMed "The Val28-->Gly single mutant at the subunit interface of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase from Photobacterium leiognathi displays a k(cat)/K(M) value of 1.7x10(10) M(-1) s(-1), twice that of the native enzyme. Analysis of the three-dimensional structure indicates that the active site Cu,Zn center is not perturbed, slight structural deviations being only localized in proximity of the mutation site. The enzyme-substrate association rate, calculated by Brownian dynamics simulation, is identical for both enzymes, indicating that the higher catalytic efficiency of the Val28-->Gly mutant is not due to a more favorable electrostatic potential distribution. This result demonstrates the occurrence of an intramolecular communication between the mutation site and the catalytic center, about 18 A away and indicates a new strategy to encode extra efficiency within other members of this enzymatic family." How many more do you want? ------------------"Illuminant light, illuminate me."
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Itzpapalotl Inactive Member |
Although non random mutation is a possible explanation there has not been a single proven example of non random mutation (Hall's lac operon experiments seemed to have proved them but a better explanation has since been provided) so something that as far as we know doesn't exist seems to be less sensible explanation than random mutation that we know does exist.
Another interesting example of beneficial mutations this time the number between two closely related species: "we therefore estimate that there have been approximately 270,000 positively selected amino-acid substitutions in the evolution of Drosophila simulans and D. yakuba" This of course does not include gene regulatory mutations that are responsible for the majority of heritable phenotypic variation in a species (about 60% of human variation is regulatory the rest is protein polymorhism). Regulatory differences seem to be responsible for the majority of the divergence between closely related species for examples humans and chimps where most of the proteins are virtually identical. So the number of beneficial protein changing mutations is likely to be lower than beneficial regulatory mutations. N. G. Smith and A. Eyre-Walker. Adaptive protein evolution in Drosophila. Nature 415 (6875):1022-1024, 2002.
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Rei Member (Idle past 7035 days) Posts: 1546 From: Iowa City, IA Joined: |
Anyway, back to the original poster. I think she wants something more dramatic than changes in bacteria. Lets give her something more interesting - how many things do you want? Let's do two for now.
1) The human tailThis is what is known as an "atavism" - a trait retained from earlier species that has become inactivated in our genome. While there are many famous atavisms in nature (legs on whales (most whales just have the joint for the legs)), a wide range of human genitalia atavisms of features only found in other primates, chicken teeth and claws, etc), the human tail is probably one of the most famous. There are two types of tails: pseudotails (which are irregular growths that just happen to be at where a tail would be), and true tails. Pseudo-tails are never inherited; true tails sometimes inherited, depending on whether it was due to environmental or genetic factors (one case has been documented being passed down through three generations). Less than one third of the human tail cases (of which there are over 100) are pseudotails. The true tail is a benign, complex arrangement of fat, connective tissue, and blood vessels, striated muscle, and vater-pacini corpuscles (a type of pressure-sensing organ) covered in normal skin, ranging from 1 to 5 inches long. True tails can be controlled through voluntary muscle contractions. Most cases do not contain bone (although many primates don't have bone in their tail either - such as the Barbary Ape), although there are several cases in which there have been up to 5 additional vertibrae in the tail. The human tail genes have already been mapped in the human genome. All of us, in fact, had a tail as an embryo; however, humans also contain the genes for the apoptosis of the tail by microphages. Of course, a tail isn't advantageous to humans, and up until recent times, people with abnormal development were typically exposed on hillsides, so it's not exactly an advantageous feature, and it's not one that has become widespread, but it nonetheless exists, and is a dramatic example of a mutation reactivating an old feature that has been genetically deactivated. Articles:Bar-Maor, J. A., Kesner, K. M., and Kaftori, J. K. (1980) "Human tails." J Bone Joint Surg Br. 62-B: 508-510. [PubMed] Baruchin, A. M., Mahler, D., Hauben, D. J., and Rosenberg, L. (1983) "The human caudal appendage (human tail)." Br J Plast Surg. 36: 120-123. [PubMed] Dao, A. H., and Netsky, M. G. (1984) "Human tails and pseudotails." Human Pathology 15: 449-453. [PubMed] Dubrow, T. J., Wackym, P. A., and Lesavoy, M. A. (1988) "Detailing the human tail." Annals of Plastic Surgery 20:340-344. [PubMed] Fara, M. (1977) "Coccygeal ('tail') projection with cartilage content." Acta Chir. Plast. 19: 50-55. [PubMed] Harrison, R. G. (1901) "Occurrence of tails in man, with a description of a case reported by Dr. Watson." Johns Hopkins Hosp. Bull. 12:96-101. Hill, W. C. O. (1974) Primates: Comparative Anatomy and Taxonomy. VII. Cyropithecinae: Cercocebus, Maccaca, Cynopithecus. New York: Halstead Press, John Wiley and Sons. Hooten, E. A. (1947) Up From the Ape. Second edition. New York: Macmillan. Ikpeze, O. C., and Onuigbo, W. I. (1999) "A bisegmented human tail in an African baby." Br J Plast Surg. 52: 329-330. [PubMed] Keith, A. (1921) "Human tails." Nature 106 :845-846. Ledley, F. D. (1982) "Evolution and the human tail." New Eng. J. Med. 306: 1212-1215. [PubMed] Lundberg, G. D., and Parsons, R. W. (1962) "A case of human tail." Am. J. Dis. Child 104: 72. Standfast, A. L. (1992) "The human tail." New York State Journal of Medicine. 92: 116. [PubMed] Sugumata, A., Sato, M., Ikeda, J., Kinosita, J., Tanihira, S., and Makimo, K. (1988) "Two cases of a true human tail." Jpn J Plast Reconstr Surg 31: 1072. Touraine, A. (1955) L'hrdit en Mdecine. Masson, Paris. 2) *Really Old* fruit flies A rather interesting experiment was performed by Michael Rose at the University of California, Irvine. He took common fruit flies and left them in a jar to breed at will, and collected all of the eggs - but destroyed all eggs layed by the flies except those layed right near the end of their life cycle. Thus, he induced a selection factor on the flies - long life. Drosophila typically live for about 30 days. After 15 generations, they were living 70-80 days each. Rose, M.R. 1989. Genetics of increased lifespan in Drosophila . Bioessays 11:132-135. Would you like a speciation example (i.e., one species spreads into different niches, and eventually loses the ability to interbreed)? I've got hundreds of them. Hell, I've even got one where an organism split into different *families*. Of course, for the really big steps like that, you're pretty much only going to see it in microscopic organisms, because it takes a lot of reproductions for such drastic change. ------------------"Illuminant light, illuminate me."
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MarkAustin Member (Idle past 3837 days) Posts: 122 From: London., UK Joined: |
quote:quote: Please note, I did not say I had faith, I said I expect. I was making a prediction that the gene will be observed to improve over time. That's what science about - making (and testing) predictions.
quote:quote: I will make a partial retraction. I meant to say that creationists claim this type of mutation is always harmful. I have had this said to me in debate by creationists whenever I bring up any other type of mutation than point mutations. Indeed many creationsist sites claim that virtually all mutations are harmful.
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Itzpapalotl Inactive Member |
some more interesting research on the evolution of duplicated genes:
B. Papp, C. Pal and L. D. Hurst. Evolution of cis-regulatory elements in duplicated genes of yeast. TRENDS in Genetics Vol.19 No.8 August 2003. "An increasing number of studies report that functional divergence in duplicated genes is accompanied by gene expression changes, although the evolutionary mechanism behind this process remains unclear. Our genomic analysis on the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae shows that the number of shared regulatory motifs in the duplicates decreases with evolutionary time, whereas the total number of regulatory motifs remains unchanged. Moreover, genes with numerous paralogs in the yeast genome do not have especially low number of regulatory motifs. These findings indicate that degenerative complementation is not the sole mechanism behind expression divergence in yeast. Moreover, we found some evidence for the action of positive selection on cis-regulatory motifs after gene duplication. These results suggest that the evolution of functional novelty has a substantial role in yeast duplicate gene evolution." Another example of positive mutations after gene duplication and an increase in information (new gene regulatory sequences). Not that this will stop some people from falsely asserting that both these things are impossible.
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Itzpapalotl Inactive Member |
More positive mutations:
Makova KD, Li WH. Genome Res. 2003 Jul;13(7):1638-45. Divergence in the spatial pattern of gene expression between human duplicategenes. "Microarray gene expression data provide a wealth of information for elucidatingthe mode and tempo of molecular evolution. In the present study,we analyze the spatial expression pattern of human duplicate gene pairs by using oligonucleotide microarray data,and study the relationship between coding sequence divergence and expression divergence. First,we find a strong positive correlation between the proportion of duplicate gene pairs with divergent expression (as presence or absence of expression in a tissue) and both synonymous (K(S)) and nonsynonymous divergence (K(A)). The divergence of gene expression between human duplicate genes is rapid, probably faster than that between yeast duplicates in terms of generations. Second,we compute the correlation coefficient (R) between the expression levels of duplicate genes in different tissues and find a significant negative correlation between R and K(S). There is also a negative correlation between R and K(A), when K(A) 0.2. These results indicate that protein sequence divergence and divergence of spatial expression pattern are initially coupled. Finally,we compare the functions of those duplicate genes that show rapid divergence in spatial expression pattern with the functions of those duplicate genes that show no or little divergence in spatial expression." Gene duplicates rapidly accumulate mutations giving the genes new functions and expression patterns giving rise to an increase in information and complexity. Zhang P, Gu Z, Li WH. Genome Biol. 2003;4(9):R56. Epub 2003 Sep 01. Different evolutionary patterns between young duplicate genes in the humangenome. Application Unavailable | Springer Nature "BACKGROUND: Following gene duplication, two duplicate genes may experiencerelaxed functional constraints or acquire different mutations, and may also diverge in function. Whether the two copies will evolve in different patterns remains unclear, however, because previous studies have reached conflicting conclusions. In order to resolve this issue, by providing a general picture, we studied 250 independent pairs of young duplicate genes from the whole human genome. RESULTS: We showed that nearly 60% of the young duplicate gene pairs have evolved at the amino-acid level at significantly different rates from each other. More than 25% of these gene pairs also showed significantly different ratios of nonsynonymous to synonymous rates (Ka/Ks ratios). Moreover, duplicate pairs with different rates of amino-acid substitution also tend to differ in the Ka/Ks ratio, with the fast-evolving copy tending to have a slightly higher Ks than the slow-evolving one. Lastly, a substantial portion of fast-evolving copies have accumulated amino-acid substitutions evenly across the protein sequences, whereas most of the slow-evolving copies exhibit uneven substitution patterns. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that duplicate genes tend to evolve in different patterns following the duplication event. One copy evolves faster than the other and accumulates amino-acid substitutions evenly across the sequence, whereas the other copy evolves more slowly and accumulates amino-acid substitutions unevenly across the sequence. Such different evolutionary patterns may be largely due to different functional constraints on the two copies." Natural selection plays a role in the evolution of the new information that results from gene duplications. Conant GC, Wagner A. Genome Res. 2003 Sep;13(9):2052-8. Asymmetric sequence divergence of duplicate genes. http://www.santafe.edu/...tions/Working-Papers/03-06-037.pdf "Much like humans, gene duplicates may be created equal, but they do not staythat way for long. For four completely sequenced genomes we show that 20%-30% of duplicate gene pairs show asymmetric evolution in the amino acid sequence of their protein products. That is, one of the duplicates evolves much faster than the other. The greater this asymmetry, the greater the ratio Ka/Ks of amino acid substitutions (Ka) to silent substitutions (Ks) in a gene pair. This indicates that most asymmetric divergence may be caused by relaxed selective constraints on one of the duplicates. However, we also find some candidate duplicates where positive (directional) selection of beneficial mutations (Ka/Ks > 1) may play a role in asymmetric divergence. Our analysis rests on a codon-based model of molecular evolution that allows a test for asymmetric divergence in Ka. The method is also more sensitive in detecting positive selection (Ka/Ks > 1) than models relying only on pairwise gene comparisons." Li W, Schuler MA, Berenbaum MR. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Sep 10 [Epub ahead of print]. Diversification of furanocoumarin-metabolizing cytochrome P450 monooxygenases intwo papilionids: Specificity and substrate encounter rate. "Diversification of cytochrome P450 monooxygenases (P450s) is thought to resultfrom antagonistic interactions between plants and their herbivorous enemies. However, little direct evidence demonstrates the relationship between selection by plant toxins and adaptive changes in herbivore P450s. Here we show that the furanocoumarin-metabolic activity of CYP6B proteins in two species of swallowtail caterpillars is associated with the probability of encountering host plant furanocoumarins. Catalytic activity was compared in two closely related CYP6B4 and CYP6B17 groups in the polyphagous congeners Papilio glaucus and Papilio canadensis. Generally, P450s from P. glaucus, which feeds occasionally on furanocoumarin-containing host plants, display higher activities against furanocoumarins than those from P. canadensis, which normally does not encounter furanocoumarins. These P450s in turn catalyze a larger range of furanocoumarins at lower efficiency than CYP6B1, a P450 from Papilio polyxenes, which feeds exclusively on furanocoumarin-containing host plants. Reconstruction of the ancestral CYP6B sequences using maximum likelihood predictions and comparisons of the sequence and geometry of their active sites to those of contemporary CYP6B proteins indicate that host plant diversity is directly related to P450 activity and inversely related to substrate specificity. These predictions suggest that, along the lineage leading to Papilio P450s, the ancestral, highly versatile CYP6B protein presumed to exist in a polyphagous species evolved through time into a more efficient and specialized CYP6B1-like protein in Papilio species with continual exposure to furanocoumarins. Further diversification of Papilio CYP6Bs has likely involved interspersed events of positive selection in oligophagous species and relaxation of functional constraints in polyphagous species." Natural selection leads to an increase in enzyme specificity and efficiancy over time. Jia L, Clegg MT, Jiang T. Plant Mol Biol. 2003 Jun;52(3):627-42. Excess non-synonymous substitutions suggest that positive selection episodesoccurred during the evolution of DNA-binding domains in the Arabidopsis R2R3-MYB gene family. "It has been suggested that evolutionary changes in regulatory genes may be thepredominant molecular mechanism governing both physiological and morphological evolution. R2R3-AtMYB is one of the largest transcription factor gene families in Arabidopsis. Using inferred ancestral sequences we show that several lineages in the R2R3-AtMYB phylogeny experienced excess non-synonymous nucleotide substitution upon gene duplication, indicating episodes of positive selection driving adaptive shifts early in the evolution of this gene family. A noise reduction technique was then used to determine individual sites in DNA-binding domains (R2 domain and R3 domain) of R2R3-AtMYB protein sequence that were favored by frequent non-synonymous substitutions. The analyses reveal that the first helix (helix1) and the second helix (helix2) in both R2 and R3 domains are characterized by more frequent non-synonymous substitutions, and thus experienced significantly higher positive selection pressure than the third helix (helix3) in both domains. Previous MYB protein structure studies have suggested that helix1 and helix2 in both R2 and R3 domains are involved in the characteristic packing of R2R3-AtMYB DNA-binding domains. This suggests that excess non-synonymous substitutions in these helices could have resulted in MYB recognition of novel gene target sites." Yet more natural selection for beneficial mutations leading to an increase in information after a gene duplication. Mol Biol Evol. 2003 Aug 29 [Epub ahead of print]. Ceplitis H, Ellegren H. Adaptive Molecular Evolution of PKCIW, a Female-Specific Gene in Birds. "It is well established that many genes on the male-specific Y chromosome oforganisms such as mammals are involved in male reproduction and may evolve rapidly due to positive selection on male reproductive traits. In contrast, very little is known about the function and evolution of W-linked genes restricted to the female genome of organisms with female heterogamety. For birds (males ZZ, females ZW), only one W-linked gene (PKCIW) is sufficiently different from its Z-linked homolog to indicate a female-specific function. Here we report that PKCIW shows evidence of adaptive molecular evolution, implying strong positive selection for new functional properties in female birds. Moreover, since PKCIW is expressed in the gonads of female birds just prior to sexual differentiation, and is thus a candidate for sex determination, it suggests adaptive evolution related to female development. This provides the first example of Darwinian evolution of a gene restricted to the female genome of any organism. Given that PKCIW exists in multiple copies on W, similar to some testis-specific genes amplified on mammalian Y, avian PKCIW may thus potentially represent a female parallel to the organization and evolution of Y chromosome genes involved in male reproduction and development." It would be fascinating to see if W linked genes under positive selection were found in the cuckoo where host specificity (egg size colour etc.) is transmitted via the female line only. Incidentaly i wonder if all the different host races of cuckoo were found on board the 'ark' (many different female cuckoos) of did they all evolve their amazing host specicficity post 'flood'.
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Quetzal Member (Idle past 5894 days) Posts: 3228 Joined: |
Hi Itz,
Just a quick note on this part (all I have time for, unfortunately):
It would be fascinating to see if W linked genes under positive selection were found in the cuckoo where host specificity (egg size colour etc.) is transmitted via the female line only. Incidentaly i wonder if all the different host races of cuckoo were found on board the 'ark' (many different female cuckoos) of did they all evolve their amazing host specicficity post 'flood'. I'm not sure that this is a very strong argument. I remember at least two studies on nest parasitism which would seem to show that selection really does play a major role in host specificity, rather than a significant genetic component. I don't have either study easily to hand but could probably dig them up if pressed. One of the studies showed differential nest parasitism as a result of an evolutionary arms race between host and parasite. IIRC, it discussed increasing complexity of parasite adaptations (like egg color, chick chirping, mouth color, etc) in several populations of one host based on egg/chick rejection - stronger discernment in potential hosts = increase in complexity of the camouflage, etc. It also talked about the high failure of nest parasitism in a geographically adjacent species with different eggs, calls, chicks, etc. The other study dealt with a study showing differential success rates in two populations of a host species based on a "least cost" tradeoff (one host population "accepted" a higher level of nest parasitism because nests without parasites suffered an even higher level of chick mortality due to the presence of a parasitic fly that was controlled by the cuckoo's chicks when present in the nest. The other population nested in an area where the fly was controlled by parasitic wasps who used the fly as hosts. This population of birds rejected nest parasitism.) Obviously there's going to be a genetic component in both cases, as the behaviors are apparently inheritable (although an argument could be made on how MUCH of the behavior is inherited rather than learned.) However, my point is that we see differential rates of nest parasitism leading to changes in host specificity based on variable selection pressures happening right now. Therefore, Noah didn't have to have multiple female cuckoos on board the putative Ark. Of course, I doubt any creationist would be able to come up with that rationale.
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Fred Williams Member (Idle past 4878 days) Posts: 310 From: Broomfield Joined: |
quote: Virtually all random mutations would be harmful in a creationist model. How harmful is the question. Even Futuyma in his graph admits that most random mutations are probably at least slightly harmful: (Evolutionary Biology, Futuyma, 1998)
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