538 CHAPTER 20
even if pollinators are scarce. The SI system almost never
re-evolves in SC lineages. Thus, both a genetic ratchet and
individual selection (sometimes) bias evolution toward self-
compatibility. However, a phylogenetic analysis showed that
the rate of diversification is greater in SI lineages than in
SC lineages, apparently because SC lineages have a higher
extinction rate (FIGURE 20.25). The great diversity of SI spe-
cies seems to be maintained by species selection.
Are there major trends in the history of life?
Do any trends or directions characterize the entire evolu-
tionary history of life? Although many have been postu-
lated, all have exceptions. Still, one might ask if there is any
feature that, on the whole, has evolved with enough consis-
tency of direction that one would be able to tell, from snap-
shots of life at different times in the past, which was taken
earlier and which later [54, 74]. Let’s consider two promis-
ing possibilities.
EFFiCiENCY AND ADAPTEDNESS There are innumer-
able examples of improvements in the form of features that
serve a specific function. The mammal-like reptiles, for
example, show trends in feeding and locomotion associ-
ated with higher metabolism and activity levels, which cul-
minated in the typical body plan of mammals. There might
well be a global trend toward greater efficiency [30]. But efficiency and effective-
ness must always be defined relative to the task set by the organism’s environ-
ment and way of life. We cannot meaningfully compare the level of adaptedness
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66 56 34
Nonplanktotrophic
Planktotrophic
Paleocene Eocene
Time (Mya)
FIGURE 20.24 A trend caused by species selection. Each bar
shows the stratigraphic distribution of a fossil species of volutid
snail. Although nonplanktotrophic species had shorter durations,
they arose by speciation at a higher rate, so the ratio of nonplank-
totrophic to planktotrophic species increased over time. (After
[39].)
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Evolution4e_20.25.ai Date 03-06-17
Solan
um
Ca
ps
ice
ae
Ioc
hro
min
ae
Lycium
Nolan
a
Ni
co
tia
na
Solanum melongena (eggplant)
FIGURE 20.25 A phylogeny of 356 species of Solanaceae
(tomato family). Blue tips indicate self-incompatible (SI)
species, and red tips self-compatible (SC) species that
can reproduce by self-fertilization. Primarily blue clades,
in which self-incompatibility is ancestral, often give rise
to SC species (in Solanum, for example), but primarily red
SC clades (such as Nicotiana) seldom give rise to blue SI
species. The predominance of self-incompatibility in this
family can be attributed, at least partly, to species selec-
tion. (From [33]; phylogeny courtesy of B. Igić.)
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