Sidetrip

What causes evolutionary trends? (2 of 2)

Irreversibility
Some traits are so difficult to reverse that the value can only move in one directionSome evolutionary changes may only be able to go in one direction, like a ratchet. For example, once an animal lineage emerges from the water and evolves the ability to breathe air, it seems to be very difficult for that lineage to revert to extracting oxygen from water. Several lineages have made the switch to air-breathing — the ancestors of terrestrial vertebrates, the ancestors of insects, and the ancestors of spiders, for example. However, no vertebrate, insect, or spider lineage has regained the ability to extract oxygen from water. Even though a few lineages have returned to leading aquatic lifestyles, these lineages still extract oxygen from air. This evolutionary ratchet produces a trend of more changes to air-breathing than away from it; once you've gone there, you can't go back.

Natural selection
Naturual selection causes consistent change in one direction Natural selection can cause evolutionary changes in a lineage to be biased in a particular direction. Consider ammonites, a clade of extinct mollusks with intricate, many-chambered shells (much like their relative, the nautilus). As new ammonite lineages evolved, the way that these chambers fit together became increasingly complex. Evolutionary change in the direction of increasing complexity was consistent and may have been caused by natural selection which favored greater shell strength.

Ammonite sutures show a trend toward greater complexity

Species selection
Traits that increase speciation rates tend to change in one directionIf a character causes a lineage to speciate more frequently, or go extinct less frequently, there will be a bias towards lineages that have that character. For example, some marine snail lineages exhibit an evolutionary trend: as time goes by, we see more and more lineages with direct development (meaning they do not go through a stage where their larvae swim around freely). Why might this be? If a lineage has direct development, its larvae don’t disperse very far—they stick close to home and are isolated from other populations. That means that if some directly-developing individuals somehow ended up in a new place, they probably would not get to reproduce with their parent population. In other words, having direct development might cause the lineage to get chopped up into isolated sub-groups—which might become reproductively isolated from one another. If direct development is indeed linked to increased speciation rates, over time, we’d expect to see more and more lineages with direct development: a trend!

Rejected explanations
Several explanations for trends have been rejected by scientists who have found no (or very little) evidence suggesting that these processes actually happen:

  • Internal drive towards complexity: All of the evidence we have so far is consistent with evolution resulting from the undirected interaction of organism with environment. There is no evidence to support a hypothesis of any sort of “internal force” governing evolutionary change and no evidence to support it.

  • Directional mutation: Mutation does not occur with a directed goal. Since mutation is random, it cannot explain trends.


previous
What causes evolutionary trends?


Take a Sidetrip
Read more about random mutation.
close
End of sidetrip -
close this window


printable version