Microevolution and macroevolution
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The Russian/Soviet entomologist Yuri Filipchenko (Cyrillic: Юрий Филипченко) first posited a distinction between microevolution and macroevolution in 1927 in his book Variabilität und Variation (German to English translation: Variability and Variation).[1] Although he subscribed to the idea of evolution, Filipchenko believed that evolution was an inherent developmental process (orthogenesis), rather than being governed by the mechanism of natural selection.[2]
The Modern Synthesis of evolution, also known as Neo-Darwinism,[3] which emerged between 1936 and 1947, reconciled "classical" Darwinian natural selection with Mendelian genetics. It also recognized microevolution as observed in living organisms (for example, at the Galapagos Islands) as being integral to macroevolution as observed in fossils.[4][5][6] Furthermore, there has been clear evidence of macroevolution: researchers have observed Darwin's Galapagos finch populations changing over time due to adaption.[7] The Modern Synthesis has been widely-accepted among scientists since then. Stephen Jay Gould challenged the Modern Synthesis with his extended evolutionary synthesis, but there is no scientific consensus for its validity.
When used in a scientific context, microevolution is the term for short-term gradual change (evolution) of gene pools within populations, while macroevolution is the term for long-term gradual change (evolution) of species (plural; the plural of "species" is also "species") that one can observe in the fossil record and with molecular clocks. Superficially, creationists can misuse those definitions, but in the scientific definitions the two concepts are interlinked rather than separate processes.
Microevolution, according to the creationists[edit]
The concept of microevolution, when used by creationists, refers to arbitrarily small evolutionary changes. This usage posits that some kinds of evolution can happen, but the larger changes — referred to as "macroevolution" — allegedly cannot happen naturally.[8] This is the evolutionary equivalent of saying that the mechanism you use to move from your bedroom to the kitchen (i.e., walking) is insufficient to get you from Boston to Los Angeles. In another sense, it is like saying that watching objects fall to Earth is "microgravity", but the Sun exerting influence on the planets is "macrogravity" (they might actually have it ready when needed). In short, it is a nonsensical distinction, but a useful concept for creationists to use where the evidence for evolution is impossible to deny.
Microevolution is a concept generally used by creationists to denote evolution, or adaptation, within a species. This is because such adaptation can be extremely obvious and easy to demonstrate — the selective breeding of dogs providing a prime example. These adaptations are only arbitrarily small, and a more concrete distinction is lacking. Some attempts have been made to say what does and does not constitute microevolution, but such things are counter-productive to creationists, as it prevents them from moving the goalposts afterwards. After all, a very good tactic when faced with new evolutionary evidence is to dismiss it as "microevolution" — and if the macro-/micro- distinction is codified, such an act becomes increasingly difficult. As such, the definition of microevolution and macroevolution floats and changes, and in some cases, even the development of a new species (which has been traditionally the cut-off point) has been shoehorned into the microevolution side.
Reasoning[edit]
In one sense, creationists can be considered to lack faith, and thus feel the need to go out and prove their assertions, rather than rely on faith. Science provides an answer, but must operate within the framework of empirical reality, and thus a conflict can arise. Science does not and cannot support the notions of Noah's Ark, as it is unfeasible. And science also can conclusively demonstrate selection pressures and their effects on the mutability of living organisms. As a result, creationists can take some science, provide an arbitrary cut-off (in this case, the micro/macro dichotomy), and still maintain their Young-Earth and special-creation beliefs.
The pseudoscientific discipline of baraminology makes use of microevolution in its operation. Baraminology proposes a vaguely more rigorous definition of the word "kind" that appears in the Bible in order to reduce the number of animals on Noah's Ark to a more reasonable (if not much more plausible) level. It then proposes that microevolution occurred within these kinds (termed "baramins") to produce the wide variety of species seen on the planet today. For example, baraminologists allege that "horse kind" produced everything from shire horses to zebras by partially naturalistic means.
The use of microevolution in baraminology is perhaps chosen in the mistaken belief that if science attacks such microevolution, it will effectively be attacking the whole concept of evolution. This isn't the case, however. The rate of evolution proposed by baraminology — within the mere 6,000-odd years allowed by standard biblical chronology — is orders of magnitude greater than any rate proposed by science, even for periods of great species diversification such as the Cambrian explosion. Baraminologists' only justification for this position is wishful thinking, and as yet, in spite of their best efforts, very few people are willing to allow wishful thinking to be considered scientific evidence.
Possible mechanisms[edit]
Explaining a distinction between microevolution and macroevolution is difficult, and creationists often ignore this entirely. One proposed explanation — indeed, the only way a complete distinction could be made — is that there would be two types of DNA. One type of DNA would be susceptible to mutation, while the other type would not, preventing a species turning into another. Needless to say, this hasn't been observed in reality.
The destruction of information, another common Young-Earth creationist gambit, could also be said to prevent macroevolution. Creationists claim that mutations can only destroy information, and thus microevolution is the result of information loss while macroevolution would be the result of information gain. Creationists propose that information gain can only be instigated by a creator, but this has also not been demonstrated in reality. There is no evidence that mutations are exclusively destructive, and there are in fact many real-life examples of evolution of new information.
Macroevolution vs. microevolution[edit]
Put simply, macroevolution is what results when microevolution occurs in two or more populations within a species. Or maybe one might think of macroevolution as the net sum of all the microevolution that occurs within a species. Either way, the unavoidable conclusion is that it's impossible for one to be true without the other!
Perhaps an example would help clear things up. Suppose there was a large population of Species A (let's just suppose, for fun, that they're salamanders) that lives in a hilly terrain. Everything's fine and dandy until some event (like an ice age) comes along, and isolates different groups on the mountaintops. Hopefully, that makes sense so far.
It shouldn't be much of a jump to assume that those different populations, no matter how similar, still have slightly different mutations and develop under slightly different conditions. Given enough time (or enough of a difference in conditions) these two groups will develop into very different populations, and when they come back together, they may not be able to inter-breed. Et voila! New species.
So there we have it: "microevolution" is what happened to each individual group. "Macroevolution" is the result when the two groups develop under different conditions. And it may sound like an esoteric example, but guess what?! It's actually happened! The "theoretical" situation accounts for the diversity of salamanders in Appalachia.[9]
Macroevolution without microevolution[edit]
Although the vast majority of speciation occurs via microevolution resulting in macroevolution, it is possible to skip the micro and create new species out of the blue. Although seemingly outlandish and admittedly rare, this has happened before.
In North America, there are two species of gray tree frog. For all intents and purposes they are identical, and they differ in only two features: their call (necessary to isolate the groups) and their genetic make-up; the species simply referred to as the Gray Tree Frog (Hyla versicolor), pictured in the top left image, has four copies of each chromosome, whereas the Cope's Gray Tree Frog (Hyla chrysoscelis), pictured in the top right image, has two (like humans). At some point in their history, a single group of larvae was born with four sets of chromosomes… these cannot breed with "normal" tree frogs, and within a two or three generations, there were two species where before there was one. No gradual change in response to the environment, just a sudden reproductive isolation leading (very quickly) to new species.
See also[edit]
- Microevolution is distinct from macroevolution section in McLean v. Arkansas Board of Education
- Eugene M. McCarthy who has some rather fringe ideas about evolution and also rejects the Modern Synthesis[10]
References[edit]
- ↑ Variabilität und Variation by Juri Philiptschenko (1927). Borntraeger. Page 93: Mikroevolution and Makroevolution.
- ↑ "Filipchenko [Philiptschenko], Iurii Aleksandrovich." In: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography, 297-303. Vol. 17. Charles Scribner's Sons, 2008. ISBN 0684315599.
- ↑ https://www.britannica.com/science/neo-Darwinism
- ↑ Evolution: The Modern Synthesis, by Julian Huxley (1942): George Allen & Unwin. Definitive Edition: The MIT Press. ISBN 9780262513661.
- ↑ The Evolutionary Synthesis: Perspectives on the Unification of Biology by Ernst Mayr (1998). Harvard University Press, revised edition. ISBN 0674272269.
- ↑ The Growth of Biological Thought: Diversity, Evolution, and Inheritance by Ernst Mayr (1982) Belknap Press. ISBN 0674364457.
- ↑ Lamichhanney, S.; Han, F.; Webster, M.; Anderson, L.; Grant R.; & Grant, P (Nov 2017). ""Rapid hybrid speciation in Darwin's finches"".
- ↑ E.g., see the Conservapedia page on Macroevolution.
- ↑ What Salamanders have Taught Us about Evolution by David B. Wake (2009) Annu. Rev. Ecol. Evol. Syst. 40:333–5.
- ↑ On the Origins of New Forms of Life: Introduction by Eugene M. McCarthy