Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1

EvoluTIonARy BIology 11


a naturalist and captain’s companion on the British Navy ship h.m.s. Beagle, tasked
with charting the coast of South America.
The voyage of the Beagle lasted from December 27, 1831, to October 2, 1836.
The ship spent several years traveling along the coast of South America, where
Darwin observed the natural history of the Brazilian rainforest and the Argentine
pampas, then stopped in the Galápagos Islands, which lie on the equator off the
coast of Ecuador. In the course of the voyage, Darwin became an accomplished
naturalist, collected specimens, made innumerable geological and biological
observations, and conceived a new (and correct) theory about the formation of
coral atolls.
Soon after Darwin returned, the ornithologist John Gould pointed out that
Darwin’s specimens of mockingbirds from the Galápagos Islands were so differ-
ent from one island to another that they represented different species (FIGURE
1.7). Darwin then recalled that the giant tortoises, too, differed from one island to
the next (FIGURE 1.8). These facts, and the similarities between fossil and living
mammals that he had found in South America, triggered his conviction that dif-
ferent species had evolved from common ancestors.
Darwin’s comfortable finances enabled him to devote the rest of his life exclu-
sively to his scientific work (although he was chronically ill for most of his life
after the voyage). He set about amassing evidence of evolution and trying to
conceive of its causes. In 1838, at the age of 29, Darwin read an essay by the Charles Robert Darwin

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_01.06.ai Date 12-05-2016

(A) Lamarck’s hypothesis

Young adults Older adults

Generation 1
Young adults

Generation 2

Young adults Surviving adults

Generation 1
Young adults

Generation 2

(B) Darwin’s hypothesis

FIGURE 1.6 Contrast between Lamarck’s
and Darwin’s hypotheses for how charac-
teristics evolve, shown across two genera-
tions. (A) Under Lamarck’s hypothesis, traits
change within the lifetime of individuals
because of their needs, illustrated here by
giraffes that need longer necks to reach
high leaves. Changes that are acquired
during this generation are passed on to
the next generation. (B) Under Darwin’s
hypothesis, there is variation among
individuals at the start of each generation.
Individuals with certain traits (e.g., a longer
neck) have a greater chance of surviving.
The variation is inherited, so survivors pass
on their traits to the next generation. Dar-
win was right, but about 50 years would
pass before scientists would understand
how the inherited variations arise.

01_EVOL4E_CH01.indd 11 3/23/17 8:43 AM

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