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At Big Think: Can we predict evolution?

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We can successfully predict the future arrangements of matter based on knowledge of the laws of physics that govern the interactions between particles. When too many particles exist to make detailed predictions about individual particles, we can use statistical physics to predict generally true and reliable outcomes of the larger system of particles. The 2nd law of thermodynamics provides us with a familiar example of outcomes based on statistical physics. If the future forms of living organisms are predictable, it will likewise be due to the ensemble of their systems of particles obeying fundamental laws of physics. “Evolution” is not a “law of physics” that is independent of or supersedes other known laws of physics.

Organisms respond in similar ways to similar circumstances.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • Evolution has long been viewed as a largely unpredictable process, influenced by chaotic factors like environmental disruptions and mutations. 
  • However, researchers have demonstrated cases in some organisms of “replicated radiation,” in which similar sets of traits evolve independently in different regions. Now, researchers report the first evidence for replicated radiation in a plant lineage. 
  • As biology learns more about phenomena like replicated radiation, we might be able to predict the course of evolution.

Evolution has a reputation for being unpredictable, yet orderly. With mutations and the environment playing huge roles, it seems that predicting which species will evolve which traits is much like guessing the roll of a single die with millions of faces. 

However, in some cases, researchers have found that the die rolls the same way again and again. A combination of separate organisms’ natural development and the environmental pressures placed on them can create very similar forms, or ecomorphs. Researchers call this phenomenon replicated radiation. (Sometimes, the term adaptive radiation is used synonymously.)

In a new paper published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, an international group of researchers demonstrated that a plant lineage living in 11 geographically isolated regions independently evolved new species with similar leaf forms. This marks the first example of replicated radiation in plants, and the groundbreaking research gives us more insight into the possible future workings of evolution. 

Note: Reason suggests that the development of “similar leaf forms” stems from the fact that they all started from the same “plant lineage.” Furthermore, reason suggests that the original plant lineage had a built-in genomic variability that allowed the variant leaf forms to dominate when environmental pressures favored that form.

evolution
Credit: Annelisa Leinbach / Big Think

The article continues: Different species of Oreinotinus [Viburnum] have different types of leaves. Simply put, some have a large, hair-covered leaf, and others have a smaller, smooth leaf. Originally, experts postulated that both leaf forms evolved early in the group’s history and then dispersed separately through various mountain ranges, carried perhaps by birds. But the distribution pattern of the species, combined with the striking differences in leaf traits, gave researchers an ideal system to explore the possibility that these leaf forms evolved independently across different regions. In other words, they could explore whether this was a case of replicated radiation.

If replicated radiation is occurring, the researchers would expect two key results. First, species in the same area should be more closely related to each other than to species in different regions. Second, similar leaf traits should be present in most areas, but they should evolve independently of one another.

Turning over the same leaf

As Oreinotinus diversified, four major leaf types evolved independently from an ancestral leaf form. The four forms varied in size, shape, margin — that is, whether the edge of the leaf is smooth or toothed — and the presence of leaf hairs. The study grouped the leaves into four types. The researchers also backed up their assessments with a statistical analysis based on these characteristics. 

Nine of the 11 areas harbor at least two leaf forms; four areas include three forms; and one, Oaxaca, is home to four. Based on simulations and models, the authors rejected the simple evolutionary model in which the leaf forms evolved before the species dispersed. They also found that chance alone does not likely explain why nine areas of endemism host two or more leaf forms. Based on these lines of evidence, the team concluded that leaf forms evolved separately within multiple regions. The leaf morphs did not originate early in Oreinotinus evolution. Rather, as different lineages diversified within different areas, each lineage “traversed the same regions of leaf morpho-space.”

So what is this clade telling us when it evolves different leaf forms? As it turns out, different leaves provide different advantages that suit particular climate niches. For example, the smaller leaves would allow more precise thermoregulation — the leaf won’t get too hot or too cold as the weather changes. On the other hand, large leaves would be better for lower-light, frequently cloudy environments, because they improve light capture and make photosynthesis more efficient. So the different leaf ecomorphs are adapted to specific sets of subtly different but often adjacent environmental niches.

The future of evolution

Researchers can now add Oreinotinus to an exclusive list of other groups of organisms known to have undergone replicated radiation, such as Anolis lizards in the Caribbean, cichlid fishes in African rift lakes, and spiders in Hawaii.

With a plant on the list, evolutionary biologists know this is not a trend exclusive to animals isolated on islands, where most of the other examples come from. Like island archipelagos, the cloud forest environments of Oreinotinus are separate from one another. A plant example will help evolutionary biologists pinpoint the broad circumstances under which we can make solid predictions about evolution.

Whether it’s Darwin’s finches, Oreinotinus, or a group of sugar-hungry E. coli, we are all subject to the mysterious workings of evolution. But perhaps, as a diverse set of research groups work to tackle the problem, the mystery will fade. As Michael Donoghue, a co-corresponding author of the Oreinotinus  study, said in a statement, “Maybe evolutionary biology can become much more of a predictive science than we ever imagined in the past.”

Full article at Big Think.

Predictive success alone does not guarantee the success of a theory of how nature works. Additional consequences of a theory must also make sense and not contradict established laws of nature. Naturalistic evolution still contradicts the principle that natural causes will on average degrade the information content (loss of functional complexity) of a system over time.

Comments
as to "replicated radiation" ...
Venoms are complex mixtures of enzymes and proteins of various sizes, amines, lipids, nucleosides, and carbohydrates. Venoms also contain various metal ions that are presumed to act as cofactors and include sodium, calcium, potassium, magnesium, and zinc. ... ... On more than 100 occasions , animals have independently evolved the ability to produce and deliver potent secretions to subdue prey or predators—venom. This prompts the following question: Have animals repeatedly adopted the same genetic toolkit for venom production? In this study, we found, surprisingly, that the venom glands of different animal lineages had similar global gene expression patterns. Notably, groups of genes involved in protein secretion, and especially stress response pathways, had similar expression levels, revealing that many animals have come up with the same solution independently. On the other hand, signaling and regulatory networks had lineage-specific patterns, suggesting that the way in which cells are regulated and communicate might reflect the diverse developmental origins of venom systems. https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2111392119
Complex chemical mixtures should have evolved 100 times independently ??? In evolutionary unrelated species ? Chemical mixtures so complex, that humans can't replicate it in labs ... Seriously, what rational person can buy this nonsense ... Do Darwinists really believe in miracles ? Replicated radiation ? :))))martin_r
August 30, 2022
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They can predict all they want. It will end in the same lack of evidence and grasping at anything. Speciation continues to be without evidence to support the delusion.BobRyan
August 30, 2022
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AaronS1978 @8, Oh, good! I wasn't sure and it's happened to me before. -QQuerius
August 29, 2022
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@Querius oh no nothing I said was directed at you and I knew it was satire I was mocking Jasna Hodži. I’m sorry it came across that way And that criticism was in one of the previous threads two weeks ago, can’t remember which one thoughAaronS1978
August 29, 2022
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AaronS78 @5,
And yet one of the major criticisms of ID is the intervention argument were the designer intervenes creating and adjusting every little thing in the organism.
I don't think I've ever run into that criticism of ID. In fact, the operation of epigenetic adaptation points to even a much greater level of design. For example, the celebrated adaptation of the beaks in Galapagos (aka Darwin's) finches occurs in a single generation, not hundreds of thousands of years! I've yet to see a convincing explanation by Darwinists of how epigenetic code could evolve by undirected incremental changes. -QQuerius
August 29, 2022
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AaronS1978 @3, The OP quoted the article written by Jasna Hodži? from the Big Think, who wrote:
Whether it’s Darwin’s finches, Oreinotinus, or a group of sugar-hungry E. coli, we are all subject to the mysterious workings of evolution.
You might have misunderstood. My comment was meant to satirize the failure of Darwinism in successfully predicting anything in advance. However, Darwinism is so squishy and malleable, it can mean anything and explain anything with mechanisms such as “parallel evolution” and “repeated independent evolution.” It comes up with what later turn out to be embarrassments such as "vestigial organs" (which turned out to have vital functionality), celebrated "missing links" (which turned out to be false), and "junk DNA" (much of which turns out to not be junk after all and, as a result, has now been renamed as "non-coding DNA). So, no. Darwinism has a terrible track record of prediction. -QQuerius
August 29, 2022
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I can’t remember if it’s “the blind watchmaker” or its “The greatest show on earth” where Richard Dawkins describes evolution tirelessly toiling and adjusting every little thing on an organism And yet one of the major criticisms of ID is the intervention argument were the designer intervenes creating and adjusting every little thing in the organism……..AaronS1978
August 29, 2022
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NicheAlan Fox
August 29, 2022
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“we are all subject to the mysterious workings of evolution.“ Screw you, you religious dip, NO ONE is subject to your magic force working and toiling daily. Adaptation comes with being a living organism not some mysterious force you claim to exist. So if you want to believe in your magic mysterious force then I get to believe in mine. BUT don’t claim yours is science and mine is notAaronS1978
August 29, 2022
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Asauber @1, Due to the complexities and flexibilities of the Darwinian Theory of Evolution (aka "the mysterious workings of Evolution," or mWOE), successful predictions are now usually made only in retrospect. This saves Darwinan fundamentalists the embarrassments of such predictions as "vestigial organs," "missing links," and "junk DNA." -QQuerius
August 29, 2022
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"the mysterious workings of evolution" What mysterious workings of evolution? Doesn't Evolution provide intellectual fulfillment (for mush-minded statists) that is based on fact? I don't get it. Andrewasauber
August 29, 2022
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