Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1
12 CHAPTER 1

economist Thomas Malthus. Malthus argued that the rate of human population
growth is greater than the rate of increase in the food supply, so that unchecked
growth must lead to famine. This essay was the inspiration for Darwin’s great
idea, one of the most important ideas in the history of thought: natural selection.
Darwin wrote in his autobiography that “being well prepared to appreciate the
struggle for existence which everywhere goes on from long-continued observa-
tion of the habits of animals and plants, it at once struck me that under these
circumstances favourable variations would tend to be preserved and unfavour-
able ones to be destroyed.” In other words, of the many individuals that are born,
not all survive; and if certain individuals with superior features survived and
reproduced more successfully than individuals with inferior features, and if these
differences were inherited, the average character of the species would be altered
over the course of generations.
Mindful of how controversial the subject would be, Darwin then spent 20
years developing his theory, amassing evidence, and pursuing other researches
before publishing his ideas. In 1844 he wrote a private essay outlining his theory,
and in 1856 he finally began a book he intended to call Natural Selection. He never
completed it, for in June 1858 he received a manuscript from a young naturalist,

Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Evolution4e_01.07.ai Date 12-06-2016

Nesomimus spp.

San Cristóbal Mockingbird
N. melanotis

Santiago

Santa
Cruz
Santa Fe

San
Cristóbal

Española

Floréana

Baltra

Marchena

Pinta
Genovesa

Isabela

Fernandina

Galápagos Mockingbird
N. parvulus

Pacic
Ocean

Atlantic
Ocean

Española Mockingbird
N. macdonaldi

Floreana Mockingbird
N. trifasciatus

South
America

Equador

Galápagos
Islands
20 km (Equador)

FIGURE 1.7 Four species of mockingbirds (Nesomimus) on different islands in the
Galápagos archipelago were among the observations that led Darwin to suspect that
different species evolve from a common ancestor.

01_EVOL4E_CH01.indd 12 3/23/17 8:43 AM

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