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Evolution happening before our eyes

mr.brunch

Well-known member
Veteran
Small fish species evolved rapidly following 1964 Alaska earthquake

from research organizations
Date:
December 14, 2015
Source:
University of Oregon

Evolution is usually thought of as occurring over long time periods, but it also can happen quickly. Consider a tiny fish whose transformation after the 1964 Alaskan earthquake was uncovered by University of Oregon scientists and their University of Alaska collaborators.

The fish, seawater-native threespine stickleback, in just decades experienced changes in both their genes and visible external traits such as eyes, shape, color, bone size and body armor when they adapted to survive in fresh water. The earthquake -- 9.2 on the Richter scale and second highest ever recorded -- caused geological uplift that captured marine fish in newly formed freshwater ponds on islands in Prince William Sound and the Gulf of Alaska south of Anchorage.

The findings -- detailed in a paper available online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences -- are important for understanding the impacts of sudden environmental change on organisms in nature, says UO biologist William Cresko, whose lab led the National Science Foundation-funded research.

"We've now moved the timescale of the evolution of stickleback fish to decades, and it may even be sooner than that," said Cresko, who also is the UO's associate vice president for research and a member of the UO Institute of Ecology and Evolution. "In some of the populations that we studied we found evidence of changes in fewer than even 10 years. For the field, it indicates that evolutionary change can happen quickly, and this likely has been happening with other organisms as well."

Survival in a new environment is not new for stickleback, a small silver-colored fish found throughout the Northern Hemisphere. A Cresko-led team, using a rapid genome-sequencing technology (RAD-seq) created at the UO with collaborator Eric Johnson, showed in 2010 how stickleback had evolved genetically to survive in fresh water after glaciers receded 13,000 years ago. For the new study, researchers asked how rapidly such adaptation could happen.

The newly published research involved stickleback collected by University of Alaska researchers from freshwater ponds on hard-to-reach marine islands that were seismically thrust up several meters in the 1964 quake.

RAD-seq technology again was used to study the new samples. Genetic changes were similar to those found in the earlier study, but they had occurred in less than 50 years in multiple, separate stickleback populations. Stickleback, the researchers concluded, have evolved as a species over the long haul with regions of their genomes alternatively honed for either freshwater or marine life.

"This research perhaps opens a window on how climate change could affect all kinds of species," said Susan L. Bassham, a Cresko lab senior research associate who also was co-author of the 2010 paper. "What we've shown here is that organisms -- even vertebrates, with long generation times -- can respond very fast to environmental change.

"And this is not just a plastic change, like becoming tan in the sun; the genome itself is being rapidly reshaped," she said. "Stickleback fish can adapt on this time scale because the species as a whole has evolved, over millions of years, a genetic bag of tricks for invading and surviving in new freshwater habitats. This hidden genetic diversity is always waiting for its chance, in the sea."

Co-authors with Bassham and Cresko on the PNAS paper were Emily A. Lescak of UA-Anchorage and Fairbanks; Julian Catchen of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; and Ofer Gelmond, Frank A. von Hippel and Mary L. Sherbick of UA-Anchorage.
 
I think the only evolution happening is the amount of people that think this is science.....

first they evolved in 10 years.

Then they say fish evolved in the past over millions of years to survive fresh and salt water.....


make up your mind.......

They ever find that "missing link" for humans?

This keeps talking about how people or animals can quickly adapt to different environments......That's called epigenetics, not evolution. Face palm.
 

floralheart

Active member
Veteran
Does evolution take time? Or does it take time before something actually starts happening? Maybe actual evolution is instant, but the time between it happening is what takes the time.
 

jesbuds

Member
I think the only evolution happening is the amount of people that think this is science.....

first they evolved in 10 years.

Then they say fish evolved in the past over millions of years to survive fresh and salt water.....


make up your mind.......

They ever find that "missing link" for humans?

This keeps talking about how people or animals can quickly adapt to different environments......That's called epigenetics, not evolution. Face palm.

Except the article explicitly states there was a genetic change in the fish. And the fun part about science is that it's true weather you believe it or not :).
 

GMT

The Tri Guy
Veteran
I wonder if what they are referring to, is actual new genes, or different genes being switched on before birth. Both would technically be termed evolution. Chickens still have the genes for teeth, which can be turned on, though chickens have "evolved" to be born with those genes turned off.
 

mr.brunch

Well-known member
Veteran
I wonder if what they are referring to, is actual new genes, or different genes being switched on before birth. Both would technically be termed evolution. Chickens still have the genes for teeth, which can be turned on, though chickens have "evolved" to be born with those genes turned off.

I guess that means once there were probably Chicken-like birds with teeth, and they didn’t do as well survival wise as the ones without.
Or they were hunted for the hens teeth :biggrin:
 

GOT_BUD?

Weed is a gateway to gardening
ICMag Donor
Veteran
And with all these protestors, we'll be able to watch Darwinism work.
 

armedoldhippy

Well-known member
Veteran
I guess that means once there were probably Chicken-like birds with teeth, and they didn’t do as well survival wise as the ones without.
Or they were hunted for the hens teeth :biggrin:

probably hunted to extinction, AKA Kentucky Fried Velociraptors...:biggrin:
 
X

xavier7995

Did you know velociraptors were only about the size of a turkey. Stupid weird facts you pick up doing home school ruining one of my favorite movie villians!
 
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