Wednesday 30 March 2011

It's happening

“Darwin was rather inclined to exaggerate the necessary slowness of the action of natural selection; but with the knowledge we now possess of the great amount and range of individual variation, there seems no difficulty in an amount of change, quite equivalent to that which usually distinguishes allied species, sometimes taking place in less than a century, should any rapid change in conditions necessitate an equally rapid adaptation.”

These words could easily have been written sometime in the past decade. In fact, they were written in 1889 by Alfred Russell Wallace, the biologist who independently came up with the idea of evolution by natural selection. And how right he is turning out to be.

Of course, like anyone with an interest in evolution, I've long been aware that natural selection can act fast. The classic example is the peppered moth, but many more have emerged over the years.


I've been keeping track of the latest studies for the past couple of years, with a view to writing a feature. I decided from the outset to exclude any examples of rapid evolution involving viruses and bacteria, partly because there are countless examples and partly because people without a background in biology find it hard to relate to this kind of stuff.


Even excluding viruses and bacteria, when I began looking into the topic, I was really amazed by just how many examples of rapid evolution have now been documented. In fact, a growing number of biologists now think that far from being the exception, rapid evolution is the norm.


As a result, my feature has turned into two, the first of which is out today. Even so, there is lots of fascinating stuff I haven't been able to fit in but would like to write about if I find the time. Hence this blog.