Walking Before Flying 32
An anonymous reader writes "BYU biostaticians report in Nature their genetic analysis of the insect, known as the 'walking stick', which apparently gives a contrapuntal example of reversible evolution. Called Dollo's Law, the principle holds that the same evolutionary pathway can never be backtracked, because of random mutations. But this insect class first had wings, lost them, then got them back again. So what's next for some humans: a happy return to dragging their knuckles?"
Contrapuntal? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Contrapuntal? (Score:2)
So Long Mom (That Was The Year That Was)
(AKA The World War III Folk Song)
So long mom, I'm off to drop the bomb
So don't wait up for me
But while you swelter down there in your shelter
You can see me... On your TV...
While we're attacking frontally
Watch Brink-e-ly and Hunt-e-ly
Describing contrapuntally the cities we have lost
No need for you to miss a minute
Of the agonizing holocaust! Yeah!
Little Johnny Jones he was a U.S. pilot
And no shrinking violet was he...
He was mighty proud when World War III was declared
He wasn't scared no sirreee...
And this is what he said on
His way to Armegeddon...
So long mom, I'm off to drop the bomb
So don't wait up for me
But though I may roam I'lll come back to my home
Although it may be... a pile of debris..
Remember mommy I'm off to get a commie...
So send me a salami and try to smile somehow...
I'll look for you when the war is over:
An hour and a half from now!
A.
Re:Contrapuntal? (Score:1)
"Return" to dragging knuckles?? (Score:3, Funny)
Back on-topic, it does open up a whole lot of new possibilities as far as evolution goes. The evolutionary tree that is so commonly displayed in high school (and some higher-level) biology books might need some major rethinking.
-Shadow
Re:"Return" to dragging knuckles?? (Score:2)
Or they've never encountered large roaming tribes of 'Jackass' fans.
Just look at the GOP! (Score:3, Funny)
rapping knuckles... (Score:5, Insightful)
Daniel
Re:rapping knuckles... (Score:1)
*kicks self*
Daniel
Re:rapping knuckles... (Score:1)
Re:rapping knuckles... (Score:5, Interesting)
Then again, I'm by far no expert on the subject...
Here it is: http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99
Researchers assumed wings could not come back once lost as the genes needed to create them would mutate beyond repair once the wings disappeared. But Whiting says there is evidence from the fruit fly Drosophila that the same genes contain instructions for forming wings and legs.
If the same were true for stick insects, there would be an evolutionary pressure to stop wing genes from mutating, even in the insects that did not have wings. Those genes could then be turned back on in the future.
Daniel
So maybe now... (Score:4, Funny)
if a fly couldn't fly, would we call it a 'walk'?
Underlying assumptions (Score:3, Informative)
Laws of probability (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Laws of probability (Score:1)
As supporting evidence, consider the large number of completely unrelated but similar appearing plants that live in the desert and look like Yucca. If multiple species can adopt a similar appearance in response to a similar environment, then why can't that happen within a single species?
Re:Laws of probability (Score:2, Informative)
This site has the best definition [charter.net] that I was able to find, but I'm not sure how much stock I would place in its accuracy.
Re:Laws of probability (Score:4, Interesting)
I believe it was more a prediction that if evolution operates as we expect, organisms would be unlikely to 'solve' an evolutionary problem the same way twice. It was not so much saying such an occurrance was impossible, but that it's occurance would out of keeping with the idea of evolution being pushed by random mutations.
That said, Dollo died in 1931, so modern discoveries like pretty much all DNA/genetic evidence wasn't available to him. I'm not sure here, but I don't think a lot of weight was put in Dollo's law anymore. Anyone out there know of reasons someone would even bother mentioning that their research contradicted Dollo's law?
Re:Laws of probability (Score:1)
Every day I base decisions on theories that have been around since I before I was in school. I have confidence that they are valid along the entire range that I operate in. This does not make any of these theories into laws! As a scientist I must accept that at any time one or more of my precious theories could be proven false and thrown out. I'll admit that I am attached to some of the theories and would be amazed if they were ever disproven. I would probably be in mourning for a while. (sort of) There is even a possibility that I would have to change fields because I am allready set in my ways and could not make the change. That said, they are still theories and until they are proven I can not call them anything more. I would contend that by calling them a law I am no longer a Scientist, I am on my way to some cult leader ready to start the next Clonaid!
Re:Laws of probability (Score:2)
Re:Laws of probability (Score:2)
Evolution is difficult to study scientifically because large parts of it are partly based on speculation, rather than observation. Humans can not completely know the past before they existed, but can only guess at one of a set of implied possibilities based on evidence discovered; humans can not also experiment with the past, and since we can not experiment and we are not omniscient, we have to make guesses.
I think it would have been better termed Dollo's corollary (or is that too strong of a word? It doesn't necessarily follow directly, but Occam's Razor would probably lead to it) to evolution theory, or something.
Re:Laws of probability (Score:4, Insightful)
Is it poor wording? Yah, but using "law" to describe a proven theory is falling by the wayside, since very little is truly provable, so "law" is almost getting a comic connotation.
Newton's third law is even pretty much a "conjecture", since we know the strong form of it isn't true in all cases, and while the weak is holding extremely well, it's entirely possible it may not be completely true.
Re:Laws of probability (Score:1)
Yes, you're right. Here's an excerpt from Richard Dawkins' The Blind Watchmaker (via Daniel Dennett's Darwin's Dangerous Idea).
"'Dollo's Law' states that evolution is irreversible... [But] There is no reason why general trends in evolution shouldn't be reversed. If there is a trend towards large antlers for a while in evolution, there can easily be a subsequent trend towards smaller antlers again. Dollo's Law is really just a statement about the statistical improbability of following exactly the same evolutionary trajectory twice (or indeed any particular trajectory), in either direction. A single mutational step can easily be reversed. But for larger numbers of mutational steps... the mathematical space of all possible trajectories is so vast that the chance of two trajectories ever arriving at the same point becomes vanishingly small... There is nothing mysterious or mystical about Dollo's Law, nor is it something that we go out and 'test' in nature. It follows simply from the evolutionary laws of probability."
Re:Laws of probability (Score:1)
Re:Laws of probability (Score:2)
In case you don't quite get the analogy: at any moment in time there are multiple directions a population may take. Just as there are many angles besides 57.138 there are many directions for the population. In almost all cases it won't go back the way it came. But it might. Just as you might find a 57.138 degree angle.
Much simpler theory (Score:2)
To adapt to a repidly-changing environment, you need a rapid turnover of new generations. Whales won't evolve their legs back again, they don't have the time to do it. Some other, smaller sea-creature will take up that niche. Maybe it'll then evolve to be really big.
Two stories about the evolution of flight in a row? Who'd'a thought it?
That is logical (Score:2)
The information isn't lost, it's merely isn't used, so if there is a need, it can be evoked quite easily, instead of having to discover it again.
Think of it as #ifdef for the genome.
Re:That is logical (Score:2)
Re:That is logical (Score:2)
I look at it like evolution spends a lot of time adding minor "features" to the program (or "bugs" like cancers which kill it off)... over time, some of those features aren't needed anymore, so the main function just doesn't branch out to that subroutine (protein) anymore, but it's still there. Which I guess is a metaphor for these "knock-out" genes, it's not that they destroyed the code, they suppressed the ability for the DNA to make that chemical...
Chromasomes, nature's DLLs... what a scary thought.
Re:That is (Not) logical (Score:1)
Because the information is not used, it is not preserved. Remember natural selection helps keep the DNA in tact by only selecting those with the correct traits to survive.
For example, somebody may have a mutation to be born without a heart... Well, obviously they won't pass that along.
Without natural selection being involved, all of this unused DNA is useless, because it has probably all mutated by now, since it is not an active part of us.
In the case of the stick-fly, which is what this article is about, the DNA for the wings were somehow tied to the DNA of the feet. So that while the creatures were not flying, and didn't have wings, the DNA stayed in tact because the feet were required for survival.
So, unless the unused DNA that you are talking about is tied to another vital part of DNA that we DO use, then it has already worthlessly mutated.
What knuckles? (Score:3, Funny)
De-evolve? (Score:1)
btw phenotypic thinking, i believe, is partially behind this misguided notion of missing-links.
*heh* (Score:3, Funny)
Well you yanks (mostly) voted him in!!!