Scientists Breed Big-Brained Guppies To Demonstrate Evolution's Trade-Offs 121
An anonymous reader writes "Scientists have long suspected that big brains come with an evolutionary price — but now they've published the first experimental evidence to support that suspicion, based on their efforts to breed big-brained fish. A Swedish team found it relatively easy to select and interbreed common guppies to produce bigger (or smaller) brains — as much as 9.3 percent bigger, to be precise (abstract). But the bigger-brained fish also tended to have smaller guts and produce fewer babies."
I for one... (Score:5, Funny)
...oh nevermind.
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Well hey - there are Billyuns and Billyuns of predicates to "I for one" so gimme a break here, folks!
- Tim
Re:I for one... (Score:4, Funny)
... welcome our guppy overlords?
Hello.
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Bigger Brained? Fewer offspring? What's next, posting on /.?
oh...
Uh (Score:4, Funny)
"But the bigger-brained fish also tended to have smaller guts and produce fewer babies"
Of course. Smart fish stay kids free to live fun and awesome lives in the wet.
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But can your skinny, smart fish that produce few offspring create other glowing animals [youtube.com]?
Thought not. Nerds 1, Brainiac fish 0.
Re:Uh (Score:5, Interesting)
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Sounds interesting. Got some reading material I could look at for more info?
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Ummm.... couldn't they select for big brain AND big guts?
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There's a hard upper bound on "expensive" organs (those that require more energy to function) based on the amount of energy a creature can consume and process.
Some creatures (like cows) spend more on having a larger and more efficient digestive tract so that they can extract more nutrition and energy from a simple diet.
Others (bears, us) spent more on this thinking organ so that we can selectively pick out more energy-dense foods to eat and get by with a simpler digestive system.
In any case, if you're an an
They aren't that smart .... (Score:1)
Idiocracy (Score:1)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387808/
film is what it is, but the introduction of the film on evolution explains it brillantly
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That's a win! (Score:3, Funny)
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You don't... but you could get a catfish or other predator to keep the population down... Some types of catfish will eat the babies when they're born without being big enough to eat the adults, for example.
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Just put less places to hide near the surface in the tank, and the adult Guppies will eat their own babies.
Fringe benefits (Score:5, Funny)
Researcher: "We didn't find anything commercially useful, but at least the fish can do my taxes for me."
Re:Fringe benefits (Score:4, Informative)
"In this paper, we describe a method of representing the US income tax declaration form in the form of a fish tank decorated with ornaments. We placed fish food at locations representing sources of income, while taxes were represented by obstacles in the form of fish tank ornaments. The statistical average time taken by the fish to feed determined the final amount of tax due."
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Phew, I thought for a moment you'd made the classic error of using the unstatistical one.
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They were actually able to go past 9.3% on brains. (Score:5, Funny)
Lets see if we can raise dumber pigs... (Score:1)
More bacon!
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More bacon!
Actually, though, this experiment does not prove much of anything. The particular gene they were selecting for might be associated with another gene for small guts, for example. And poorer nutrition would almost certainly imply smaller broods.
We know that many genes are not independent, for example. In order to prove that this trait (bigger brains) by itself was actually the CAUSE of smaller guts and sma
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Q) Do you eat your own babies?
End of Test
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Are you testing IQ or evolutionary potential?
From the point of view of a single fish, eating the young has many advantages. Less competition for food, space, oxygen and they may taste better then the crap the fish usually get.
So why not eat them? It's not like they're going to take care of their parents in their old age (other then cleaning up their bones once they die).
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Read the article. The bigger-brained guppies were smarter in the tests they were given.
Special snowflage guppies (Score:2)
That doesn't mean they were smarter. Perhaps the smaller-brained ones have ADHD, dyslexia, asshatburger syndrome, or just get nervous taking tests.
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Idiocracy (Score:3)
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some people still claim that film is a comedy. i just find it scary.
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A very accurate prediction of the future masquerading as a comedy (that did terrible in the theaters but I loved the first time I saw).
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Of course it did terrible in theaters. Consider how stupid you'd have to be to pay current ticket prices and what this movie was about.
A Delicious Side-Effect (Score:2)
A Swedish team found it relatively easy to select and interbreed
A rotund researcher licked his lips as he continued, "... a delicious side effect that we noticed was that the larger brained fish had an overall higher fat content and therefore made lutefisk that hardly tasted like soap! On a side note, we will have to breed many thousand more fish to make sure that we have not stumbled upon a localized minimum for reproductive abilities. My colleagues would agree with me if they weren't so busy utilizing the restrooms."
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See, for me this brought to mind an entirely different kind of swedish fish. [swedishfish.com]
Though gummy fish with huge brains seem kind of scary actually.
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It is the fat that gets converted to soap, so: no.
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I for one didn't read the article. I doubt you did either. They might have used a substantially large genetic pool. It's on thing to take the top 10% from 20 guppies and quite another to select the top 10% from a million guppies.
This should have been *left outer* the discussion (Score:2)
Inner breeding requires joins, so it's not webscale.
Intelligent Design (Score:1)
If I were to have published this paper I wouldn't have used the term "artificial evolution". I would have called it "Intelligently Designed Evolution" just to make everyone rage. Especially since they were selecting for bigger brains.
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The way to troll other scientists is not to act like a nut job. If you do that they'll simply dismiss you as a nut job, ignore you and happily go on with their much more interesting work.
The way to troll scientists is to prove their pet theory wrong (and no, you won't do that with evolution). I'm talking about some pet theory in a sub-sub-sub-field. Unfortunately, that involves doing groundbreaking science which is rather difficult.
Good luck.
Obligatory (Score:1)
Think of the guppies!
The next experiment: (Score:2)
Selectively breed for bigger brains, bigger guts and more babies.
I'd gladly trade..... (Score:5, Funny)
...a smaller gut for a bigger brain. Alas, it was not meant to be...
I'm glad I'm a Betta.... (Score:2)
... because I don't work so hard. Guppies are so frightfully clever, and they all wear grey. And Goldfish are stupid. Besides, they all wear gold. No, I don't want to play with goldfish children.....
Breed for one trait, other traits deteriorate. (Score:5, Insightful)
This doesn't seem very enlightening. If small guts are normally selected against and you specifically breed them, providing they also have large brains, it should come as no surprise that your large brained guppies have smaller guts on average. If all the large brained guppies have smaller guts then brain size and gut size are probably controlled by the same genes: in guppies. That's interesting but not very general.
I would be more interested to see if they could genetically engineer guppies with large brains and normal size guts and see if they are competitive with their unenhanced cousins. Alternatively, but less conclusively, they could attempt to breed large brained guppies with normal sized guts. A negative result would suggest that either this combination of traits either can not be encoded or does not survive if encoded. How well understood is the guppy genome?
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It couldn't possibly be resource limitations, i.e. a finite amount of nutrients means that if organ X gets more Y must get less, could it?
Study confirms... (Score:2)
What the movie "Idiocracy" already taught us...
"That result suggests that bigger brains are somehow associated with smaller broods "
A few million years back the headline was: (Score:2)
Martian Scientists Breed Big-Brained Apes To Demonstrate Evolution's Trade-Offs
Fiendishly cunning, the huns (Score:2)
Don't be silly, it's all a hoax created by the Germans in WW2. [google.com]
What I want to know is... (Score:2)
Oh, guppies (Score:2)
Yuppie guppies (Score:2)
The large brained fish decided to focus on their careers instead of settling down to raise a family.
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"we found the male subjects preferred to watch videos of mating while stroking their gonopodiums rather than engaging in intercourse or seeking female fish"
It's not an evolutionary tradeoff (Score:2)
If it is artificically introduced, then by definition, it isn't an evolutionary tradeoff.
Friend (Score:1)
Re:Friend (Score:5, Funny)
Woah, this intelligent guppy posts on slashdot with an ID. The ones I bred only post AC
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Woah, this intelligent guppy posts on slashdot with an ID.
Not only that, but he has a 5 digit UID! :P
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Look on the bright side, at least you didn't create roman_mir or the Kristopelts.
Them are smart fish you have there sir (Score:1)
Woah, this intelligent guppy posts on slashdot with an ID. The ones I bred only post AC
Them sure are smart fish you have there. Ask them how they post AC, I want to learn me that there trick.
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no trick to it really, they ask me to solve the captcha to post AC. they're so stupid, unmotivated and lazy.
Need bigger brains for ./ commenters (Score:2)
There are quite a few posts talking about how this isn't natural selection. How it's not evolution. How they should have done this with genetic engineering. How everyone who can write a comment would have done it better than these guys. That's very cute.
It's important to keep in mind that natural selection will effectively span the full probability space of all possible traits as far as offspring go, and only the strongest survive.
What that means is twofold:
1. Given that you're trying to study tradeoff
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Only those most suited to the current environment survive. Strength has nothing to do with it.
Also, in the wild, it's more like "Only those most suited living long enough to breed in the current environment have ancesters."
Does the smaller gut inhibit caloric intake? (Score:1)
I read the article but it didn’t address this. Gene expression takes energy. Large dinosaurs spent a lot of energy on both creating and maintaining their size. We have to assume they had a lot of food available.
While the larger brain increased cognitive capabilities of the guppies, did it also reduce the fitness of the specimens?
Would the children of Nepalese sherpas, if raised in lower altitudes, have the same lung capacity of their brethren? It’s a question of gene expression.
Humans killed
My 1985 UG thesis on evolutionary psychology (Score:3)
Princeton: "Why Intelligence: Object, Stability, Evolution, and Model". I presented an analogical story about why simpler thinking could be better for survival because it allowed faster reaction times. I developed some of those ideas into a couple of conference presentations and made a couple related simulations of self-replicating robots in the late 1980s.
Then I wrote an (unpublished) essay about it in a PhD grad program at SUNY Stony Brook in Ecology and Evolution around the early 1990s, outlining why Hydras did not have brains, focusing there more on the actual cost to the organism to have a big brain. Not much traction there then. I had another cool idea there about the normal distribution as an ideal search function for an arbitrary discontinuous problem space.
My wife (who I met in E&E grad school around then) did her graduate thesis work on why foraging theory was wrong because sometimes organisms that made "dumb" decisions would do better than ones that all made "Smarter" decisions that set them in competition with each other. Just today we were discussion this, and I was thinking that for social species, it would make sense for individuals to move to a food source with a probability related to its relative size, so that the population could forage optimally. That might explain aspects of human behavior where people seem to make "dumb" decisions, perhaps also reflected in behavior of troops of bonobos or chimps. I might predict that solitary foragers might do less of that? Probably some PhD or even Nobel Prize in that for someone else. :-)
Glad to see this kind of research is going mainstream a couple decades later. Back then, especially as I was motivated in this direction by thinking about robotics and AI, such ideas were very far out of the mainstream. They were not rejected so much as mainly ignored or not understood. Plus, I wanted to build what I thought would be a next stage in human (co-)evolution -- the self-replicating space habitat, and that took things way too far...
I thought about those ideas in part from reading people like Victor Serebriakoff and his book "Brain", Gregory Bateson and "Steps to an Ecology of Mind", Norbert Weiner on Cybernetics and "The Human Use of Human Beings", and "The Selfish Gene" by Richard Dawkins. "The Two Faces of Tomorrow" by James P. Hogan also underlay some bunch of that. And then at my advisor's suggestion because I was looking into this area, "Vehicles: Experiments in Synthetic Psychology" by Valentino Braitenberg (possibly a pre-release copy?) and "Man, Robot and Society: Models and Speculations" by Masanao Toda talking about "The Fungus Eater" robot thought experiment. This was before "Evolutionary Psychology" became a field of its own eventually.
It is possible that these time, material, heat, and energy costs of computation may define limits that prevents many of the scenarios people outline for various flavors of computational "Singularity". Like everything, intelligence can have diminishing returns depending on the level and the context -- although it might also have threshold where exceeding some level may change the nature of the survival game entirely too.
Other articles on Slashdot have talked about how individual human intelligence peaked thousands of years ago:
http://science.slashdot.org/story/12/11/13/191217/study-claims-human-intelligence-peaked-two-to-six-millennia-ago [slashdot.org]
Although environment has a lot to do with intelligence, too. And there are ways that today has the most interesting environment in some ways, even if unhealthy diets and lifestyles are probably greatly diminishing intelligence a lot too these days.
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I presented an analogical story about why simpler thinking could be better for survival because it allowed faster reaction times. ... Like everything, intelligence can have diminishing returns depending on the level and the context -- although it might also have threshold where exceeding some level may change the nature of the survival game entirely too.
You would be interested in a fiction book called Blindsight, by Peter Watts. Check it out!
Blindsight by Peter Watts (Score:2)
Sounds fascinating, thanks! http://www.amazon.com/Blindsight-Peter-Watts/dp/0765319640 [amazon.com]
brain size = intelligence ? (Score:2)
"the bigger-brained fish also tended to have smaller guts and produce fewer babies."
Just like humans!
I have to question the association with size & smarts. 100 years ago in the age of eugenics, there was an effort to measure people- individuals and ethnic groups, and to draw conclusions based on those measurements. There was a general assumption that a large head (and presumably brain) indicated an
Makes Sense (Score:1)
Well, that makes sense. As we all know, educated people have fewer children and often eat healthier.
Idiocracy (Score:2)
Re:Has nothing to do with evolution (Score:5, Insightful)
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I think there's a difference between breeding and evolution. Breeding plays with existing traits and amplifies/changes them. Evolution actually creates something new. You can't "breed" a dog to have wings or gills or anything that the ancestor wolves didn't have. But you can play with size and hair length and things like that.
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Just where do you think these new things come from through evolution if not some kind of selective breeding? Evolution isn't magic; some wolf doesn't just go "gee, those birds look yummy" then birth pups with wings.
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Mutation creates anew, selection winnows, evolution is the sum of both effects.
The selection can be 'natural selection' or 'directed selection' and the result is still change over time, otherwise known as evolution.
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No, there is no significant difference. Evolution is a change in allele frequency in a population, due to various causes including both drift and selection, acting on alleles created by mutations. The only difference between this case and "natural" selection is that some scientists created the selection pressure intentionally, instead of it being accidental. The guppies evolved to survive in a new environment that happened to have been created by white humans for that purpose, but nature itself creates odd
Re:Has nothing to do with evolution (Score:4, Informative)
Actually still evolution. The natural environment of these guppies changed from a tank in a pet store to a tank that happened to be in a lab filled with apes who like to kill small brained guppies for their own amusement (or some other reason, who can say why white coated apes do what they do). Through random mutation some guppies had larger brains. Because of the selection pressure in this new environment those guppies tended to survive to produce offspring while the predator killed their smaller brained counterparts.
Same shit different day. Replace the apes in coats with some other environment change that favors big brained guppies and kills off the dumb ones and the result would be pretty much the same. Guppies have no magical sixth sense that tells them to do something genetically different in the presence of guppy slaying apes than guppy slaying anything that isn't apes.
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Indeed, it has everything to do with evolution. Corn and rice and some of their weed pests have evolved according to the attempted controls of farmers. I remember learning of a weed found in Japanese rice paddies. Originally the plant looked nothing like a young rice plant, but since farmers weeded it vigorously, the weed evolved so that for some of its life cycle it resembled strongly a young rice plant, very hard to farmers to differentiate from real rice. (Sorry, references not at hand. Perhaps it w
Echinochloa oryzoides (Score:2)
I remember learning of a weed found in Japanese rice paddies. Originally the plant looked nothing like a young rice plant, but since farmers weeded it vigorously, the weed evolved so that for some of its life cycle it resembled strongly a young rice plant, very hard to farmers to differentiate from real rice.
That would be Echinochloa oryzoides [wikipedia.org] (Early Barnyard Grass), and the process of artificial selection in agriculture known as Vavilovian Mimicry [wikipedia.org].
Oats and Rye are believed to be examples of weeds that were so successful at mimicry, that they eventually were domesticated and became "secondary crops".
Re:Has nothing to do with evolution (Score:5, Insightful)
Not evolution
Obviously this is intelligent design.
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Guppies are not being designed.
Their evolution is being guided.
I know it sounds clever, but that's not really what "intelligent design" means when it's being used as a proxy for creationism.
Spirit-directed evolution (Score:2)
Their evolution is being guided.
Which only means that the creationists will start calling day-age creationism "Spirit-directed evolution".
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I'd say mod you up... but I'd hate for them to see the idea... so your... and my... comment must be modded down.
Dove-shaped mouse cursor (Score:2)
Believing in God doesn't have to mean he's intervening in nature
You're talking about deism, right?
He who wrote the program controls the results.
And has the power to interact with the program through a debugging hook called holy spirit. Ever seen Jehovah God's active force represented as a dove? That's His mouse cursor.
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I actually thought of that as a snappy comeback on facebook a few days ago. But the fact is that it's not evolution, it's "artificial selection". It's the same process that turned wolves into man's best friend over the last 20,000 or so years.
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You're correct in that it is not 'evolution by natural selection'. You're incorrect in that it is still 'evolution'.
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Obviously this is intelligent design.
It might be better described as intelligent selection, as none of the initial genetic variation (or new mutations occurring during the process) were created by the researchers.
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Man is a part of the environment anyway.