T
The_Barbarian
Guest
Barbarian observes:
Neither of these is strictly true
(attempt to show otherwise)
"At the first step, consisting of all the processes leading to the production of a new zygote (including meiosis, gamete formation, and fertilization), new variation is produced. Chance rules supreme at this step, except that the nature of the changes at a given gene locus is strongly constrained." Ernst Mayr What Evolution Is, p120
It’s more than just that. You see, the likelihood of mutations at different locations is different. So it’s not really random there, either.
DNA loss and evolution of genome size in Drosophila.
by: DA Petrov
Genetica, Vol. 115, No. 1. (May 2002), pp. 81-91.
Mutation is often said to be random. Although it must be true that mutation is ignorant about the adaptive needs of the organism and thus is random relative to them as a rule, mutation is not truly random in other respects. Nucleotide substitutions, deletions, insertions, inversions, duplications and other types of mutation occur at different rates and are effected by different mechanisms. Moreover the rates of different mutations vary from organism to organism.
Barbarian asks:
For the latter, I don’t know of anything random about natural selection. Can you tell us about it?
"This second step is a mixture of chance and determination. Clearly, those individuals with characteristics providing the greatest adaptedness to the current circumstances have the greatest probability of survival. However, there are also many chance elimination factors, so that there is no pure determination even at this step. Everything is somewhat probabilistic." Ibid
Taking Mayr’s statement as evidence that natural selection is random is like saying gravity is random, since rocks fall downhill, but sometimes, through unexpected circumstances, they get moved uphill. Neither gravity nor natural selection are random at all, but intervening effects can alter what they do.
Intragenic Variation of Synonymous Substitution Rates Is Caused by Nonrandom Mutations at Methylated CpG
Journal of Molecular Evolution
Kazuhisa Tsunoyama, Matthew I. Bellgard and Takashi Gojobori
Abstract. It has been observed that synonymous substitution rates vary among genes in various organisms, although the cause of the variation is unresolved. At the intragenic level, however, the variation of synonymous substitutions is somewhat controversial. By developing a rigorous statistical test and applying the test to 418 homologous gene pairs between mouse and rat, we found that more than 90% of gene pairs showed a statistical significance in intragenic variation of synonymous substitution rates. Moreover, by examining all conceivable possibilities for the cause of the variation, we successfully found that intragenic variation of synonymous substitutions in mammalian genes is caused mainly by a nonrandom mutation due to the methylation of CpG dinucleotides rather than by functional constraints.
To be fit means to possess certain properties that increase the the probability of survival. This interpretation is equally applicable to the “nonrandom survival” definition of natural selection.
Ernst Mayr, What Evolution Is p. 118
Read the whole book. It’s a wonder of clarity, summing up evolutionary theory. But he’s already taught you something, albeit by trial and error.
Neither of these is strictly true
(attempt to show otherwise)
"At the first step, consisting of all the processes leading to the production of a new zygote (including meiosis, gamete formation, and fertilization), new variation is produced. Chance rules supreme at this step, except that the nature of the changes at a given gene locus is strongly constrained." Ernst Mayr What Evolution Is, p120
It’s more than just that. You see, the likelihood of mutations at different locations is different. So it’s not really random there, either.
DNA loss and evolution of genome size in Drosophila.
by: DA Petrov
Genetica, Vol. 115, No. 1. (May 2002), pp. 81-91.
Mutation is often said to be random. Although it must be true that mutation is ignorant about the adaptive needs of the organism and thus is random relative to them as a rule, mutation is not truly random in other respects. Nucleotide substitutions, deletions, insertions, inversions, duplications and other types of mutation occur at different rates and are effected by different mechanisms. Moreover the rates of different mutations vary from organism to organism.
Barbarian asks:
For the latter, I don’t know of anything random about natural selection. Can you tell us about it?
"This second step is a mixture of chance and determination. Clearly, those individuals with characteristics providing the greatest adaptedness to the current circumstances have the greatest probability of survival. However, there are also many chance elimination factors, so that there is no pure determination even at this step. Everything is somewhat probabilistic." Ibid
Taking Mayr’s statement as evidence that natural selection is random is like saying gravity is random, since rocks fall downhill, but sometimes, through unexpected circumstances, they get moved uphill. Neither gravity nor natural selection are random at all, but intervening effects can alter what they do.
Take a look. Often, words mean different things in science than they do to the layman. “Random” in mutations, means we can’t predict when one will happen, not that all of them are equally likely, or even that we can’t predict a pattern of mutations. Sometimes, we even know the cause:This stuff seems pretty basic; I thought you would have known it … but I get the feeling your objections are more personal than professional.
Intragenic Variation of Synonymous Substitution Rates Is Caused by Nonrandom Mutations at Methylated CpG
Journal of Molecular Evolution
Kazuhisa Tsunoyama, Matthew I. Bellgard and Takashi Gojobori
Abstract. It has been observed that synonymous substitution rates vary among genes in various organisms, although the cause of the variation is unresolved. At the intragenic level, however, the variation of synonymous substitutions is somewhat controversial. By developing a rigorous statistical test and applying the test to 418 homologous gene pairs between mouse and rat, we found that more than 90% of gene pairs showed a statistical significance in intragenic variation of synonymous substitution rates. Moreover, by examining all conceivable possibilities for the cause of the variation, we successfully found that intragenic variation of synonymous substitutions in mammalian genes is caused mainly by a nonrandom mutation due to the methylation of CpG dinucleotides rather than by functional constraints.
If you’ve actually read Mayr’s book, you should have picked up these facts.When you make an intelligent objection I’ll be happy to reply but your petulant carping is uninteresting and not worth the time it takes to respond.
To be fit means to possess certain properties that increase the the probability of survival. This interpretation is equally applicable to the “nonrandom survival” definition of natural selection.
Ernst Mayr, What Evolution Is p. 118
Read the whole book. It’s a wonder of clarity, summing up evolutionary theory. But he’s already taught you something, albeit by trial and error.