Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1
10 CHAPTER 1

In the eighteenth century, several French philosophers and naturalists sug-
gested that species had arisen by natural causes. The most significant pre-Dar-
winian evolutionary hypothesis was proposed by the Chevalier de Lamarck in
his Philosophie Zoologique (1809). Lamarck hypothesized that different organisms
originated separately by spontaneous generation from nonliving matter, starting
at the bottom of the chain of being. A “nervous fluid” acts within each species, he
said, causing it to progress up the chain. Species originated at different times, so
we now see a hierarchy of species because they differ in age (FIGURE 1.5A).
Lamarck argued that species differ from one another because they have differ-
ent needs, and so use certain of their organs and appendages more than others.
Just as muscles become strengthened by work, more strongly exercised organs
attract and become enlarged by the “nervous fluid.” Lamarck, like most people at
the time, believed that such alterations, acquired during an individual’s lifetime,
are inherited—a principle called inheritance of acquired characteristics. The the-
ory of evolution based on this principle is called Lamarckism. In the most famous
example of Lamarck’s theory, giraffes must have stretched their necks to reach
foliage above them, and so their necks were lengthened. The longer necks were
inherited, and over the course of generations, this process was repeated and their
necks got longer and longer. This could happen to any and all giraffes, so the
entire species could have acquired longer necks because it was composed of indi-
vidual organisms that changed during their lifetimes (FIGURE 1.6A). L a m a rc k ’s
ideas of how evolution works were wrong, but he deserves credit for being the
first to advance a coherent and testable theory of evolution.

Charles Darwin
Charles Robert Darwin (February 12, 1809–April 19, 1882) was the son of an Eng-
lish physician. He briefly studied medicine in Edinburgh, then turned to studying
for a career in the clergy at Cambridge University. He believed in the literal truth
of the Bible as a young man. He was passionately interested in natural history. In
1831, at the age of 22, his life was forever changed when he was invited to serve as

Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de
Monet, Chevalier de Lamarck

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_01.05.ai Date 10-31-2016

Q: Does Darwin’s version need any red nodes
along the curvy branches?

Complexity

(A) Lamarck’s hypothesis

Time

Form

(B) Darwin’s hypothesis

Time

FIGURE 1.5 Lamarck’s and Darwin’s hypotheses of the history of evolution. (A) Under
Lamarck’s hypothesis, life has originated many times (the red dots). Each lineage that
descends from one of these origins becomes more complex. Thus, organisms range
from recently originated, simple forms of life to older, more complex forms. (B) Dar-
win’s theory of descent with modification, represented by a phylogenetic tree. From a
single ancestor (the red dot), different lineages arise by speciating (splitting) from ex-
isting lineages. Some (such as the more central lineages) may undergo less modifica-
tion from the ancestral condition than others. Darwin supposed that species become
different from each other in various features (“form”), not necessarily becoming more
complex. (A after [1].)

01_EVOL4E_CH01.indd 10 3/23/17 8:43 AM

Free download pdf