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Why are we trying to “demonstrate” microevolution?

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Daphnia obtusa Kurz/University of South Carolina

From Science Daily:

A new study shows that larger eye size is the source of a sizable reproductive advantage for a tiny freshwater crustacean, Daphnia obtusa. The research provides hard data for eye microevolution that, until now, were lacking.

Huh? Hard data were lacking, for something as obvious as microevolution? It gets better:

The focus of the research team was a tiny freshwater crustacean, Daphnia obtusa Kurz. Just 1 to 2 millimeters long, Daphnia would be hard to spot except for one distinguishing feature: its black eye, which is large for its body size.

“A big eye is costly to maintain, because any kind of neurological tissue, including retinal tissue, is energetically demanding relative to other kinds of tissue,” Dudycha says. “And we also know there are organisms, like blind cave fish, that once had eyes and have moved into environments without any light at all, and they lose their eyes, which wouldn’t happen unless there was a cost to having an eye. So if there is a cost to keep having eyes, there needs to be some kind of benefit, and we were wondering if we could measure that benefit.”

Maybe.

The correlation was clear: an increase in eye diameter of 20 micrometers, which is about one standard deviation of the mean diameter, translated into about one more egg beyond the average of about six.

More.

Sure, but ecologies can change, such that large eyes, or any eyes at all might not be such a benefit. Life is a history, not a theory. As we say here, stay tuned,

More generally, doesn’t everyone take microevolution for granted? It’s not clear that it is even a “thing,” that is, something to think about …

In a constantly changing world, it must occur. But when does it make much difference in the long run?

Remember Darwin’s finches’ beaks? The famous changes that were supposed to add up to a new species every two hundred years turned out to be caused by hybridization. They tended to reverse themselves when the ecology altered. We should regard such changes and changes back as normal within a species.

Yes, Darwin’s “fittest” survive (that’s a tautology; it’s simply what “fittest” means). But if the conditions that make a given life form more fit than others are constantly changing, the fittest may be least likely to undergo an irreversible evolution in one direction, not the most likely to do so.

Question: Has microevolution via Darwinism (natural selection acting on random mutation) ever been shown to result in complex, co-ordinated changes across a number of systems in an organism, changes that result in major new capabilities? Let’s hear a demonstrated example.

No, macroevolution is asserted, not demonstrated. Because, as Richard Dawkins said, Darwinism is the only known theory that is in principle capable of explaining certain aspects of life. (p. 287, Blind Watchmaker, 1986).

As it happens, that is no longer true. A number of non-Darwinian mechanisms can account for significant change.

Law prof Phillip Johnson, as so often, has it right about why Bimbette’s vast TV audience “believes in” “evolution” (Darwin-style):

To make the story look better, the National Academy of Sciences improved on some the facts in its 1998 booklet on “Teaching about Evolution and the Nature of Science.” This version of the story omits the beaks’ return to normal and encourages teachers to speculate that a “new species of finch” might arise in 200 years if the initial trend towards increased beak size continued indefinitely. When our leading scientists have to resort to the sort of distortion that would land a stock promoter in court, you know they are having trouble fitting their evidence to the theory they want to support.

Or, rendered in the vernacular, shuddup, cringe, and listen to Bimbette. And many will. A few continue to subscribe to critical thinking.

Here’s the abstract:

Several studies of eye morphology have analysed macroevolutionary patterns in the diversity of eyes, and although these studies are often linked to environment or behaviour, they provide only indirect evidence of selection. Specific data to show the microevolutionary potential for adaptation by natural selection in eye morphology have been lacking. We document directional selection on eye size, an important determinant of visual capabilities, in a wild population of the freshwater microcrustacean Daphnia. We show that even slight changes in eye size may have major consequences for fitness. An increase in eye diameter of 19.9 μm – slightly more than one standard deviation – is associated with an increase in clutch size of one egg, or an increase of nearly 20% of the mean clutch size. Furthermore, relative eye size is genetically variable and thus could evolve in response to the observed selective pressure. We conclude that selection on incremental variation in eye size may have led to differences observed on broader taxonomic scales. (paywall) – C. S. Brandon, T. James, J. L. Dudycha. Selection on incremental variation of eye size in a wild population of Daphnia. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 2015; 28 (11): 2112 DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12711

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Comments
harry: Mindless, accidental alterations to the extremely precise information that instantiates a given kind is as likely to produce new and beneficial functionality as are mindless, accidental alterations to the text of a short story likely to produce a full length novel Actually, given mutation, recombination, and a suitable selection criterion, then yes, long texts can evolve.Zachriel
November 26, 2015
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I think this proves that eyes can evolve by microevolution. Darwin can now rest easy.Mung
November 26, 2015
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In Darwin's day it was already known from the work of dog breeders that there could be wild variety within a given kind, and that some versions of a given kind could be so different from other versions of the same kind that they could no longer successfully mate. Changing beak sizes and shapes in Darwin's finches, or some versions of finches no longer being able to mate with another version, didn't reveal anything we didn't already know. Dog breeding had demonstrated that there were limits to those wild varieties that ended variation somewhere before dogs became cats or horses or anything other than a dog. This is because the information required to build something other than a dog just isn't present in the canine genome. A wild variety of dogs are present, but nothing else. A loss of information sometimes renders one version of a given kind no longer able to fruitfully mate with another version of the same kind, which is often confused with speciation when it occurs naturally. It isn't that at all, because it is the result of a loss of information, not the result of mindlessly, accidentally arrived at new information. All of this is true of Darwin's finches. If one can get dogs ranging from Great Danes to Chihuahuas to bulldogs, what was the significance of finch beaks changing in size and shape, or one version of finch no longer being able to successfully mate with another? That demonstrated nothing about the possibility of one kind becoming another kind. It demonstrated nothing about how finches came to be in the first place. What it demonstrated was the genius of the designer of the finch genome, in that He had built into it an adaptability to changing environments. The genome of a given kind is filled with much extremely precise, digital information which may include information that allows for some amount of adaptability to changing environments. Where environmental changes exceed that adaptability, extinction begins. Consider an imaginary universe consisting of letters where "life" is an instance of a coherent arrangement of some of those letters. Mindless, accidental alterations to the extremely precise information that instantiates a given kind is as likely to produce new and beneficial functionality as are mindless, accidental alterations to the text of a short story likely to produce a full length novel -- which is to say there is no way that a given kind is ever going to accidentally become a higher, more complex life form. Everyone knows that precise information subject to mindless, accidental modifications quickly becomes gibberish. Natural selection just isn't going to change that basic fact. Again using our short story as an example, if there occasionally were accidental, mindless modification to the text of a short story that actually made sense, that would be so rare that that occasionally happening could not counter the overall effect of mindless modifications to precise information -- which is to reduce it to gibberish. This remains true even if the version of the short story accidentally enhanced in a minor way could somehow be saved or "selected." To see this, build a simple "life form" in our imaginary universe by writing a few coherent paragraphs. Then make 20 mindless, thoughtless, purposeless modifications to it, each consisting of one changed character or one additional character. It has become less coherent. Now make a thoughtful one-character correction to it that tends to restore its intelligibility -- this is the rare, luckily advantageous modification to the life form. Now save your document and repeat the process on the saved version. Continue doing this until you get bored. You will ultimately end up with gibberish, not Gone With the Wind or any other lengthy, coherent document. Contemporary, unquestioning acceptance of mindless, purposeless, accidental evolution as an explanation for the various life forms we find today is not due to the fact that that notion makes sense; it is due to the fact that the atheistic "powers that be" want desperately to believe it, and have successfully indoctrinated others with that absurd notion.harry
November 26, 2015
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News: But when does it make much difference in the long run? The study shows it makes a lot of difference to the crustacean being studied. News: Yes, Darwin’s “fittest” survive (that’s a tautology; it’s simply what “fittest” means). What they showed wasn't tautological. They showed that reproductive success was related to the size of the eye.Zachriel
November 26, 2015
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The research provides hard data for eye microevolution that, until now, were lacking.
I think this answers the question posed in the title. Even "obvious" claims ultimately have to be supported by evidence.daveS
November 26, 2015
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