Could hedgehogs evolving to avoid cars be a sign of ongoing evolution?

  • Thread starter Desiree
  • Start date
  • Tags
    Evolution
In summary, the conversation discussed the concept of evolution and whether humans are still evolving and developing into new forms and species. It was mentioned that while evolution still works, it lacks a driving force in the case of humans, as medical advancements and societal changes have allowed even the most unfit individuals to survive and reproduce. However, there are still examples of natural selection occurring, such as bacteria rapidly evolving to counter antibiotics. The conversation also touched on the potential for future predictions in evolutionary biology, though it was noted that the predictive power of evolution is limited. Overall, there is no "peak" in evolution and it is an ongoing process, though it may go through periods of plateau.
  • #1
Desiree
22
0
My knowledge of biology is very limited and I know just the basics, so please enlighten me.

This evolution phenomenon has started way way back in the past and as a result, today we see varieties of species including humans. My question is: are WE (present species) still being evolved and developed into new forms and species? Has this process reached its peak yet and levelled off or no it never stops? I tend to think, say 1 million years from now, WE are not going to be as much different and diverse as we were 1 million years ago. Is evolution a trend which could be plotted for future times, predicting what WE will look like or turn into.

There are computer softwares which illustrate how a teenage will look like when he/she is 40 or 50. Is there such predictions in evolutionary biology to predict what WE will look like/turn into in for example 50,000 years.
https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/what-is-evolution-a-beginners-guide/
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Biology news on Phys.org
  • #2
One of the big weaknesses of modern biology is the inability to use it to predict things like that. Evolution is a theory with great explanatory power but rather limited predictive power. However, for simple organisms, in simple environments it is possible to accurately predict evolutionary trends, so there is some hope that the predictive power of evolutionary theory will improve significantly in the near future.
 
  • #3
Evolution still works, although - in the case of humans - it lacks at the moment its driving force.

You don't have to be fit to survive and procreate, you have to be very, very unfit to loose your chance. And even if you are very unfit, medicine will do everything it can to let you survive and make some kids, that will be even more unfit than you are. So in the case of human race there is most likely no evolution at the moment.
 
  • #4
If I recall correctly, there is one prion which about 10% of the population is immune to because they lack a certain protein which doesn't have a function. Don't take my word for it, but use it more as a thought device.
 
  • #5
DaleSpam said:
One of the big weaknesses of modern biology is the inability to use it to predict things like that. Evolution is a theory with great explanatory power but rather limited predictive power. However, for simple organisms, in simple environments it is possible to accurately predict evolutionary trends, so there is some hope that the predictive power of evolutionary theory will improve significantly in the near future.

Bacteria have been evolving VERY rapidly to counter our antibiotics. This is a serious health concern. It is also classic natural selection in a VERY complex environment -- our bodies(although with simple organisms). This should have been very predictable.
 
  • #6
wildman said:
Bacteria have been evolving VERY rapidly to counter our antibiotics. This is a serious health concern. It is also classic natural selection in a VERY complex environment -- our bodies(although with simple organisms). This should have been very predictable.
You are right, it is a complicated environment. I am not an expert in the literature, but I am not aware of any study where the development and propagation of anti-biotic resistance in a pathogen population was quantitatively and accurately predicted outside of laboratory conditions.
 
  • #7
Desiree said:
Has this process reached its peak yet and levelled off or no it never stops? I tend to think, say 1 million years from now, WE are not going to be as much different and diverse as we were 1 million years ago.

There is no "peak" in evolution, it is an ongoing process though it does go through "plateaus" when the species' environmental conditions and habits do not change for long peroids of time.

I believe you are correct that we will become less diverse in the future since our merging of cultures and travel will most likely continue to increase. Segregation brings out diversity.
Although 1 million years is a long time and we may not be very similar at all to the way we look today.

Today we are still working on predicting individual chemical pathways on a cellular and tissue level, but in the future our knowledge may be complete enough to have reliable models to make such predictions.

Unless, of course, in the future we start custom building our babies. :)
 
  • #8
It is also important to understand that evolution is a process that takes generations to manifest. If you walked past an actual Neanderthal on the street one day, dressed in modern clothes and wearing a baseball cap, you may not even notice him. And they lived on the order of 50,000-100,000 years ago.
 
  • #9
Borek said:
Evolution still works, although - in the case of humans - it lacks at the moment its driving force.

You don't have to be fit to survive and procreate, you have to be very, very unfit to loose your chance. And even if you are very unfit, medicine will do everything it can to let you survive and make some kids, that will be even more unfit than you are. So in the case of human race there is most likely no evolution at the moment.

Not entirely true. For about the last century, the impoverished are most likely produce the most offspring.
 
  • #10
Ivan Seeking said:
Not entirely true. For about the last century, the impoverished are most likely produce the most offspring.

Good point, missed that. In the past cenrturies it was more or less the opposite - those rich had more children. Not necesarilly legal ones ;)
 
  • #11
It has often made me wonder what, if any, genetic selection is occurring. Of course we can to an extent correlate race to poverty.
 
  • #12
To some extent no elimination, no selection. But this anticonception thing skewes statistic of reproduction.
 
  • #13
If the poor/uneducated are having more children than the rich (which appears to be the case in many places), there IS selection - the poor/uneducated are favored over the rich/educated.
 
  • #14
Is there a poverty gene or an education gene?

Just because one demographic reproduces more than another does not imply evolution is occurring. There must be a genetic trait defining that demographic for evolution to occur.
 
Last edited:
  • #15
DaleSpam said:
Is there a poverty gene or an education gene?

I don't think it is that simple. Consider for example alcoholism, which is generally claimed to be genetic. In the US, how much of the poverty rate can be attributed to acoholism or addiction? This is not to say that all poor people are alcoholics and addicts, but are people with a strong genetic predisposition to alcoholism and addiction more likely to be impoverished and produce more offspring than they might otherwise?

Are there genetic traits that tend to give people an advantage in the pursuit of wealth; such as good looks, and health?

Are you more likely to receive a college education or to be successful beyond poverty, based on intelligence? Is intelligence partly a function of genetics?
 
Last edited:
  • #16
I actually don't have an opinion on the answer to the question "is there a 'poverty' or 'education' gene". I tend to think, like you, that it is not a simple question, and I have never been convinced that such "nature v nurture" questions are ever clearly answered.

My point is that unless there is a genetic component to poverty then the fact that poor people reproduce more is not a driving force in human biological evolution. The weaker the genetic component, the less relevant it is for evolution.
 
  • #17
Ivan Seeking said:
It has often made me wonder what, if any, genetic selection is occurring. Of course we can to an extent correlate race to poverty.

While this may get more into social sciences than biology, it seems to me there is a trend more toward blending of the races more so than the past isolation of people that led to formation of distinct races. It's a fairly modern concept that a man from the US who is of mixed African and European ancestry could meet an Asian woman and have a child who grows up and marries someone of Middle Eastern ancestry. It takes only a few generations to blend all the continents again.

As to the original question, yes, evolution is always ongoing. And as others have pointed out, there isn't really a predictive aspect to the theory, it's mostly evaluating changes that have already occurred in hindsight to understand how species have changed.
 
  • #18
  • #19
As long as some individuals - for whatever reason - have more offspring (who grow to breed) than others, and some children die before breeding, evolution is occurring.

People are still dying for various reasons, and if they die before they breed, or before they breed as much as they might've, they're being selected against. Just because we have various methods of extending life beyond the limits other animals face, does not mean we are subverting evolution. Human society itself is an evolutionary benefit of our species, we have protection from other animals, medicine, surgery, family members who'll care for us. These are all evolutionary adaptations that help us survive.

So yes, evolution is still ongoing. Especially now, as people of different populations who in the past were isolated by geography are mixing at increasing rates, we'll see all sorts of new combinations of gene traits that were very unlikely hundreds of years ago, with more chances for mixes of various traits to produce even more fit humans.
 
  • #20
First of all - how do we define evolution?

Because what is happening to the human population is not necesarilly evolution in terms of "producing better fit individuals". They are somewhere in the population. Are there more of them? Does their number grow, together with the population? Or does their number goes down, as their genes are mixed with genes of those less fit? What wins - sheer population growth, or lack of selection?

What is happening is rather that the population becomes more and more diverse, gaussian tails become longer and longer in all directions, mean value (whatever it means) shifts because of the processes that have been signalled earlier. But is it still evolution in Darwin's terms?

So, if we define evolution as shifting of the mean (and that's not a completely absurd thing, as evolution doesn't touch single individuals, but whole populations), it is still ongoing. If we define it as a production of better fit, it doesn't. At least IMHO.
 
  • #21
wasteofo2 said:
As long as some individuals - for whatever reason - have more offspring (who grow to breed) than others, and some children die before breeding, evolution is occurring.
Biological evolution only occurs if there is some genetic trait that differentiates the two groups. If the genes are the same and it is only some environmental factor then no biological evolution occurs.
 
  • #22
Moonbear said:
While this may get more into social sciences than biology, it seems to me there is a trend more toward blending of the races more so than the past isolation of people that led to formation of distinct races.

In the context of genetic diversity, this statement is certainly more biological than social. :D

We can easily see how isolation within a certain environment can effect how a population adapts genetically in a relatively short period of time (evolutionarily speaking) by looking at the phenotypical differences within the worlds' human races.

I am surprised by all those that seem to think this process ever stops.

Living things will always adapt to a changing environment and ours is changing quite drastically. By environment I am NOT speaking of global warming...I mean our diets (junk food and microwaves), technology (couch potato-living and comfy drives to desk jobs), etc.. But we will adapt to all these changes of lifestyle...eventually.
 
  • #23
Borek said:
First of all - how do we define evolution?

Because what is happening to the human population is not necesarilly evolution in terms of "producing better fit individuals".
I do not believe that better fit individuals is a requirement of evolution, no. I believe evolution simply requires changes that are inherited that increase in the gene pool.
 
  • #24
Borek said:
Evolution still works, although - in the case of humans - it lacks at the moment its driving force.

You don't have to be fit to survive and procreate, you have to be very, very unfit to loose your chance. And even if you are very unfit, medicine will do everything it can to let you survive and make some kids, that will be even more unfit than you are. So in the case of human race there is most likely no evolution at the moment.

Wouldn't this lead to degeneration? Mutations will accumulate, we'll become less fit, have all sort of (genetic) diseases, yet we'll survive because of medical technology.
 
  • #25
Count Iblis said:
Wouldn't this lead to degeneration? Mutations will accumulate, we'll become less fit, have all sort of (genetic) diseases, yet we'll survive because of medical technology.
That would be an unfortunate result of people reproducing thanks to medical intervention. Normally these people would not have reproduced. We're predominantly going to see this kind of thing more in Western Cultures that have access to this kind of medical intereference with nature.

I was discussing this with someone yesterday. In the future will people want a medical background check on their future spouse? Do you want to knowingly pass down a terminal illness or crippling disabilty to your children if you know in advance and can avoid it? There is always the risk for some people to pass on a genetic disease, but if this person would have never been born, or if he/she has a hamily history of people that would not be born and they have little hope of living a long and healthy life, would it be something that you would take into consideration? Perhaps decide not to have children? If I was on the fence about a guy, knowing something like this might be what it takes to move on.
 
  • #26
Count Iblis said:
Wouldn't this lead to degeneration? Mutations will accumulate, we'll become less fit, have all sort of (genetic) diseases, yet we'll survive because of medical technology.

As far as I read that's already happening, unfortunately I can't provide reference as article I have on mind was published in Polish insert to Polish edition of SciAm about ten years ago. It was by some PhD anthropologist.

Look around you - how many of our friends and relatives will be long dead if not for the medical assistance they are getting? Why so many women have problems getting pregnant? In many cases they are already daughters of women that had the same problem 20-30 years ago so they have - stupid as it sounds - inherited the problem. Things like lactose intolerance, coeliac disease - higher and higher fraction of the population is affected. That's the degeration.
 
  • #27
Borek said:
Things like lactose intolerance, coeliac disease - higher and higher fraction of the population is affected. That's the degeration.

On the other side of things I believe that something like sickle cell anemia offers some benefits against malaria. This suggests then that it's not wholly clear that artificially selecting toward eliminating what today may be seen as "degeneration" wouldn't weaken the human genome as well by selecting against enzymes and protein productions in intermediate stages that may offer positive selection in future generations for unforeseen perturbating factors that may arise in nature.

Certainly whatever robustness that evolution may have must come from the range of variations that are presented in each generation to be selected for the next. Some things presumably that offer little chance of survival in any generation can seemingly be selected against safely, if such selections would never live to reproduction anyway.

Personally I think that the heroic attempts to fulfill everyone's reproductive agendas is misguided in the same way as remembering that through the middle of last century, there were such efforts made stopping forest fires - to the point that the resulting fires became all the bigger and more devastating. Hence the current practice of controlled burning.

Nature seems to have a pretty consistent pay me now or pay me later way of maintaining things it seems.
 
  • #28
DaleSpam said:
Biological evolution only occurs if there is some genetic trait that differentiates the two groups. If the genes are the same and it is only some environmental factor then no biological evolution occurs.

Unless I am mistaken I believe that environmental factors (or even simple random mutation) can change DNA. Perhaps these changes are not drastic enough though to promote evolution.
 
  • #29
TheStatutoryApe said:
Unless I am mistaken I believe that environmental factors (or even simple random mutation) can change DNA. Perhaps these changes are not drastic enough though to promote evolution.

I think he was trying to draw a distinction between the process of selection, whether it's environmentally imposed or imposed through behavior and the actual changes that would become a part of the future genome for the species.

And yes chance ultimately needs to play a hand, whether by radiation happenstance like cosmic rays, or by other means, to introduce the first instance of the trait in the species so that it may be selected for in succeeding generations.
 
  • #30
In the future we will no longer be the homo sapiens we are now. We will turn into gigantic blobs of goo and thought...we will also be partially artificial...and will no longer have the need to use the bathroom more than once a day...yes it will be amazing.
 
  • #31
LowlyPion said:
I think he was trying to draw a distinction between the process of selection, whether it's environmentally imposed or imposed through behavior and the actual changes that would become a part of the future genome for the species.

And yes chance ultimately needs to play a hand, whether by radiation happenstance like cosmic rays, or by other means, to introduce the first instance of the trait in the species so that it may be selected for in succeeding generations.

...and yup...evolution can occur macroscopically and microscopically. It can occur smoothly and randomly. It is an ongoing process...all systems are essentially dynamic and its rare that you'd ever find a steady one...processes in nature are usually always dynamic.
 
  • #32
Gear300 said:
In the future we will no longer be the homo sapiens we are now. We will turn into gigantic blobs of goo and thought...we will also be partially artificial...and will no longer have the need to use the bathroom more than once a day...yes it will be amazing.

Perhaps when we teach robots to think for themselves and replicate themselves we will have served our evolutionary purpose?
 
  • #33
LowlyPion said:
Perhaps when we teach robots to think for themselves and replicate themselves we will have served our evolutionary purpose?

Perhaps so...
 
  • #34
LowlyPion said:
I think he was trying to draw a distinction between the process of selection, whether it's environmentally imposed or imposed through behavior and the actual changes that would become a part of the future genome for the species.
Exactly. Biological evolution is a change in gene frequency within a population. The driving force for evolution is natural selection. If there is a trait which is naturally selected, but which is not genetic, then that selection does not cause biological evolution.

Say that some species' coloration is dependent on environmental factors (e.g. available diet) instead of genes. Say further that one color is naturally selected over another (e.g. through preferential predation). Then those of the right color will more often survive to reproduce, but their children will not inherit the color trait because it is not genetic. The frequency of genes in the population will not change.
 
  • #35
DaleSpam said:
Exactly. Biological evolution is a change in gene frequency within a population. The driving force for evolution is natural selection. If there is a trait which is naturally selected, but which is not genetic, then that selection does not cause biological evolution.

Say that some species' coloration is dependent on environmental factors (e.g. available diet) instead of genes. Say further that one color is naturally selected over another (e.g. through preferential predation). Then those of the right color will more often survive to reproduce, but their children will not inherit the color trait because it is not genetic. The frequency of genes in the population will not change.

Yes, but I rather think the environmental circumstance in your example will ultimately tipple some change into the genome by other means at a minimum, because if it is diet that causes the coloration then a preference for that diet and avoidance of the predated will surely be selected for. And that preference will cause the domination of that color in the species even though the color gene itself was not altered. There will be an apparent preference gene, even if only such preference is born out of some third unrelated factor like the predated color causing berries give gas and indigestion.

It's a beautifully complex process.
 

Similar threads

  • Biology and Medical
Replies
2
Views
821
  • Biology and Medical
Replies
7
Views
7K
  • Science Fiction and Fantasy Media
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
32
Views
9K
  • Biology and Medical
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • Biology and Medical
3
Replies
75
Views
8K
  • Sci-Fi Writing and World Building
Replies
4
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
3K
Replies
5
Views
3K
Replies
4
Views
3K
Back
Top