Just curious here... Evolution knowledge
Posted 27 October 2004 - 01:09 PM (#1)
I figured I'd test the waters (so to speak) of everyone else's knowledge.
Who knows exactly how evolution happens. Use a fish for an example.
Note how you get multiple species from one,
how they end up looking different,
how they become separate species,
and what makes/keeps them separate species
Just firing up the scientific stuff, don't mind me! Reward for getting it right... respect and smilies I'd imagine...
Posted 27 October 2004 - 03:00 PM (#2)
I watched NOVA last night about lobed fin fishes walking on the sea floor and becoming land animals.
Link:28 bowfront journal
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Posted 27 October 2004 - 04:10 PM (#3)
I've just sat a few classes on this subject so i have a bit of an unfair advantage here, i'll let someone take my hints above and give a "proper" answer.
i'm just too tired busy to be honest, but if need be, ill write a full answer when i get up in the morning :nod:
Posted 28 October 2004 - 12:37 AM (#4)
You're close on a lot of accounts, traumatic, but species don't react to situations by creating new adaptations. This is a confusion that persists even in biology graduates. Bottom line; either you're ready or you're not. Meaning: either you have the variety to adapt and diversify or you don't.
Posted 28 October 2004 - 11:28 AM (#5)
this however, does not seem to relate to anything that has been domisticated. just take the dog for example. its almost difficult to believe that a pug dog's ancestry comes down from a wolf, and that yes, they can interbreed. even betta fish have been purposefully selectively bred for longer fin traits, sadly, in the wild these would be at a disadvantage. I wonder how much humans really have mettled with the do process of evolution?

Posted 28 October 2004 - 12:37 PM (#6)
No one's quite hit it yet. There are key ways for genes to change and a key element to help species get created.
Posted 28 October 2004 - 03:50 PM (#7)
more then anything else, it goes like this
all you need is isolation, time, and necessity
Quote
how they end up looking different
/\isolation will take care of that
Quote
/\ time takes care of that
Quote
/\ necessity does that
Posted 28 October 2004 - 10:47 PM (#8)
However, time alone can't make species.
Necessity is something that can't be understood by "species" the way
we understand it. I'll let things stew a while before I drop my angle.
Posted 01 November 2004 - 06:38 PM (#9)
Random genetic mutations occur in any given population of animals.
Some of these mutations are expressed as physiological characteristics that give the individual animal advantages over the other animals These advantages allow the individual animal to to live longer and create more offspring - thus multiplying the genes that create the advantageous physical characteristics.
Over a given period of time, the population of animals as a whole takes on these advantageous characteristics by genetic inheritance.
When animal populations of the same species are separated by a boundary, they can diverge genetically far enough apart to be considered separate species.
This post has been edited by Bullsnake: 01 November 2004 - 07:37 PM
The fish keeper is master of his aquariums.
The fish maniac, their slave.
IF FOUND, RETURN TO LOUNGE.
Posted 01 November 2004 - 11:33 PM (#10)
I'd like also to see some more posts and ideas.
This post has been edited by Polypterus: 01 November 2004 - 11:41 PM
Aldo Leopold
Specialist in all things Anachronistic and oddball
Posted 02 November 2004 - 04:04 PM (#11)
acestro, on Oct 28 2004, 07:47 PM, said:
However, time alone can't make species.
Necessity is something that can't be understood by "species" the way
we understand it. I'll let things stew a while before I drop my angle.
Quote
we understand it. I'll let things stew a while before I drop my angle.
i meant it more like, how a birds beak would find it nessecary to adapt to a
certain new seed that it would have to eat to live. i wish i had the vocabulary to exlpain it.
bull snake did a good job at it. ill give it more thought and maybe later i it'll come to me
Posted 03 November 2004 - 10:10 AM (#12)
Bullsnake got two big points. Genetic Mutation being one factor to change genes.
More importantly the isolation of populations. Just a little off here, the populations are thought to be unchanged until after separation.
The key point of separation of species and then their evolution is "allopatric speciation".
But there's a few more important ways that species can change besides genetic mutation......
And how to keep new species separate.....
Posted 03 November 2004 - 01:58 PM (#13)
acestro, on Nov 3 2004, 07:10 AM, said:
But there's a few more important ways that species can change besides genetic mutation......
And how to keep new species separate.....
what if the same species went two different ways cause of two different preffered foods kinda thing
Posted 03 November 2004 - 03:14 PM (#14)
But this still requires separation (allopatry), probably, and mutation. There can be something else driving that change in diet.....
Posted 03 November 2004 - 04:10 PM (#15)
acestro, on Nov 3 2004, 12:14 PM, said:
But this still requires separation (allopatry), probably, and mutation. There can be something else driving that change in diet.....
the loss of a certain food that the species is specialized in??
Posted 03 November 2004 - 05:08 PM (#16)
Quote
And how to keep new species separate.....
Environmental and climatic differences?
For example, the Artic fox evolving a white pelt while the grey fox evolved a grey-brown pelt.
This post has been edited by Bullsnake: 03 November 2004 - 05:09 PM
The fish keeper is master of his aquariums.
The fish maniac, their slave.
IF FOUND, RETURN TO LOUNGE.
Posted 05 November 2004 - 02:43 AM (#17)
Mutation
Natural Selection
From here it starts to get a little tough, but there's three more.... for a hint, think Hardy and Weinberg...
Posted 05 November 2004 - 10:10 PM (#18)
:laugh: hope this makes sense to you guys
This post has been edited by Death in #'s: 05 November 2004 - 10:11 PM
Posted 06 November 2004 - 06:35 PM (#19)
I wish I had been here at the start...
I add these to the brain storm for those seriously wanting to answer what Ace is looking for...hehe, homework if you will....and to be fair I will add another link that covers creationary thought as well since both are hypothetical....
http://www.ucmp.berk.../evolution.html
http://www.talkorigins.org/
-George Santayana
Member of the Month, January 2004
Posted 08 November 2004 - 08:56 PM (#20)
The concepts of natural selection and mutation seems well understood, allopatry too. There's another kind of selection (which really falls under nat'l selection) and a couple of ways genes can go (or come...)...

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