The second part of Lamarck’s mechanism for evolution involved the inheritance of acquired traits. He believed that if an organism’s traits changed over the course of its lifetime, the organism would pass these traits along to its offspring.
Lamarck’s theory has been proven wrong in both of its basic premises. First, an organism cannot fundamentally change its structure through use or disuse. A giraffe’s neck will not become longer or shorter by stretching for leaves. Second, modern genetics shows that it is impossible to pass on acquired traits; the traits that an organism can pass on are determined by the genotype of its sex cells, which does not change according to changes in phenotype.
Darwin: Natural Selection
While sailing aboard the HMS Beagle, the Englishman Charles Darwin had the opportunity to study the wildlife of the Galápagos Islands. On the islands, he was amazed by the great diversity of life. Most particularly, he took interest in the islands’ various finches, whose beaks were all highly adapted to their particular lifestyles. He hypothesized that there must be some process that created such diversity and adaptation, and he spent much of his time trying to puzzle out just what the process might be. In 1859, he published his theory of natural selection and the evolution it produced. Darwin explained his theory through four basic points:
- Each species produces more offspring than can survive.
- The individual organisms that make up a larger population are born with certain variations.
- The overabundance of offspring creates a competition for survival among individual organisms. The individuals that have the most favorable variations will survive and reproduce, while those with less favorable variations are less likely to survive and reproduce.
- Variations are passed down from parent to offspring.
Natural selection creates change within a species through competition, or the struggle for life. Members of a species compete with each other and with other species for resources. In this competition, the individuals that are the most fit—the individuals that have certain variations that make them better adapted to their environments—are the most able to survive, reproduce, and pass their traits on to their offspring. The competition that Darwin’s theory describes is sometimes called the survival of the fittest.
Natural Selection in Action
One of the best examples of natural selection is a true story that took place in England around the turn of the century. Near an agricultural town lived a species of moth. The moth spent much of its time perched on the lichen-covered bark of trees of the area. Most of the moths were of a pepper color, though a few were black. When the pepper-color moths were attached to the lichen-covered bark of the trees in the region, it was quite difficult for predators to see them. The black moths were easy to spot against the black-and-white speckled trunks.