Evolution as a process: current adaptability brings stasis (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Wednesday, January 24, 2024, 22:07 (97 days ago) @ David Turell

A study showing adaptability is stabilized:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/living-fossil-lizards-are-constantly-evolvin...

"Scientists have long wondered how these species withstand the pressures of natural selection. The prevailing hypothesis for this “stasis paradox” has been that natural selection keeps some species unchanged by selecting for moderate or average traits (so-called stabilizing selection) rather than selecting for more extreme traits that would cause a species to change (directional selection). But a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA contradicts this idea, showing that evolution constantly favors different traits in seemingly unchanging animals that improve short-term survival. In the long term, though, “all that evolution cancels out and leads to no change,” says the study's lead author, James Stroud, a biologist at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

"Stroud and his colleagues studied four anole lizard species, all relatively unchanged for 20 million years, living on a small island in Florida's Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden. The researchers captured members of these populations every six months for three years... Stroud expected to observe stabilizing selection at work preserving moderate traits. Instead he saw clearer evidence of directional selection: some lizards with unique traits, such as stickier toes, survived better in the short term.

"In each generation, though, the “best” traits changed—for instance, long legs aided survival in some years and short legs in others. The direction and strength of selection fluctuated so much that sometimes there was no clear pattern. Such changes are probably happening “back and forth on a micro scale with no net directional change,” says Rosemary Grant, a Princeton University evolutionary biologist, who has studied stabilizing selection in Darwin's finches." (my bold)

Comment: "Because the new study shows that natural selection favored extreme traits from year to year rather than moderate ones, its results don't support the theory of stabilizing selection. Instead they offer “a good explanation for why we see what we think is stabilizing selection,” says Tadashi Fukami, an ecologist studying evolution at Stanford University. Many new traits are evolving in the short term, but they don't provide a crucial advantage over the long term. In other words, species in stasis may simply have found the best possible combination of traits for lasting success in their environment."

https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzGwJvfPTvJKWQWBWxFDZgrNHLrS

My comment: This is playing word games. The species is static, just adapting back and forth to a changing environment. Calling it stabilized selection simply tries to fit it into Darwin theory. Also presented here: Tuesday, January 02, 2024, 18:16


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