MACROEvOLuTiON: EvOLuTiON AbOvE THE SPECiES LEvEL 533
Gradualism and punctuated equilibria
Paleontologists have held two rather different views of evolutionary rates, which
were expressed during a controversy that is not entirely over. Gradual transitions
through intermediate states have been described
for many morphological transitions, but the fos-
sil record of many other groups is marked by gaps
rather than continuous change (FIGURE 20.16A).
Most paleontologists have followed Darwin in
supposing that evolution was actually gradual
but that the fossil record is incomplete. In 1972,
however, Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould
proposed a more complicated, and much more
controversial, explanation, which they called
punctuated equilibria [20].
Eldredge and Gould said that species in the
fossil record often show long periods of little or
no detectable phenotypic change, interrupted by
rapid shifts from one such “equilibrium” state to
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Difference between observed and
predicted phenotype
0 5 10 15 20
Elapsed time (My)
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
1.6
250 μm
Ancestor-descendant
populations
Sister
populations
FIGURE 20.15 The relationship between evolutionary changes
in shape in fossilized lineages of the marine ostracod crustacean
Poseidonamicus and the elapsed time during which evolution has
occurred. The figure shows the ostracod’s shell; the colored circles
are landmarks used for measurments that were used to character-
ize the shape. In the graph, blue dots show changes between vari-
ous ancestral and descendant populations in individual lineages
and red dots show differences between sister populations that
diverged from a common ancestor. The vertical axis shows the
difference between the shape change that actually occurred (“ob-
served” change) and how the shape would have changed if it had
evolved strictly along the direction of greatest phenotypic (and
presumably genetic) variation within species (i.e., evolution along
lines of least resistance, as described in Chapter 6). Especially for
pairs of sister populations, changes that deviate more greatly from
the presumed line of least genetic resistance occur over longer
time spans. (After [45]; photo courtesy of Gene Hunt.)
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Evolution4e_20.16.ai Date 12-16-2016
Time
Character value
Time
(B) Punctuated equilibria
Character value
(e.g., size)
Time
(A) Hypothetical data
Character value
(C) Phyletic gradualism
FIGURE 20.16 Two models of evolution, as applied to a hypothetical set of
fossils. (A) Hypothetical values for a character in fossils from different time periods.
These data might correspond to either of the models shown in panels B and C.
(B) The punctuated equilibria model of Eldredge and Gould, in which morpho-
logical change occurs in new species. Morphological evolution, although rapid, is
still gradual, as shown in the inset by the shift in the frequency distribution of the
phenotype. (C) The traditional gradualism model. The character mean changes
gradually within a single species, faster at some times than others.
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