Questions tagged [natural-selection]

A mechanism of evolution that leads to non-random spread of genes due to the effect that genes have on reproductive success.

Selection is an important mechanism of evolution which brings about changes in gene frequencies by inducing variance in reproductive success as a direct result of the genes possessed. Selection is the mechanism of evolution which underlies the process of adaptation.

Darwin theorised that evolution could occur by natural selection in the 1800's, based on the idea that variance in heritable phenotypic characteristics could have a direct effect on reproductive success. As such, individuals that posses genes which give them an advantage in reproduction should (assuming selection is constant between generations) also produce offspring of a higher fitness, and the offspring generation would more closely resemble that individual than the parental generation did.

A classic example is the peppered moth. Before the industrial revolution most peppered moths were light in colour. Pollution from the industrial revolution caused the darkening of the environment. This gave an advantage to peppered moths that possessed genes causing a darker colouration, because predators were less able to spot them relative to lighter moths. The genes for dark phenotypes then spread through the population because these individuals were able to produce more offspring.

Questions about how selection works, the effect of selection, population genetic interactions, and interactions with other mechanisms of evolution are generally on-topic. Subjective questions about the validity of evolution by selection are generally off-topic. Before asking why a seemingly advantageous trait has not evolved see this post. Understanding Evolution is a particularly useful introductory source and includes a large myth-busting section.

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Do beneficial viruses exist? If so, what examples are there?

Typically, people call viruses some kind of organic compounds that cannot reproduce autonomously and which lower the fitness of their hosts. Even the word "virus" means "venom" in Latin. But from the perspective of natural selection, one would…
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Why do some bad traits evolve, and good ones don't?

If a trait would be advantageous to an organism then why hasn't it evolved yet? Conversely, if a trait is not advantageous or mildly disadvantageous, why does it exist? In other words why does evolution not make the organism more "perfect"? This is…
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Is there evidence that some non-human species perform sexual selection based primarily on intelligence? How do they do this?

I'm a biology amateur, but it seems like sexual selection is almost always performed based on physical characteristics, the outcome of physical contests, or some sort elaborate courtship. But do any non Homo-Sapiens perform sexual selection based on…
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How could a species be engineered to go extinct?

Non-biology background here. I read this very interesting article: https://www.wired.com/story/crispr-eradicate-invasive-species/ However I am having a hard time wrapping my head around something: From my basic understanding of natural selection, a…
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Why are there species instead of a continuum of various animals?

As I understand it, various animal traits have to evolve gradually, but what happens to the species that are "neither here nor there"? To put it differently, if a species evolved from another, it did so because it's somehow better, right? So why are…
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Why do only two sexes exist for animals?

Why, from the natural selection point of view, do only two sexes exist for animals?
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Did Darwin ever reach the conclusion that selection will remove variation?

According to simple models of selection the genetic variance in a population should be reduced by selection. (Fisher's fundamental theorem states that the rate at which a population can evolve is limited by its variance). If we select the next…
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Is there a biological mechanism for evolution encoded into our DNA?

Throughout high school, I remember learning about Darwin's theory of evolution as if it were near-fact. But something always seemed wrong about the ideas presented. Survival of the fittest Random mutation Natural Selection All of these things seem…
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Why did humans become bipedal?

Somewhere in evolutionary history homo started walking upright and became bipedal. You hear these hypotheses that, by walking upright, they could see better across the grassy savannas to escape predators, find food, find fellow humans etc. However,…
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Structure of fitness landscapes in the NK model

The NK model of rugged fitness landscapes consists of $N$ sites where fitness contribution of each site depends on its state $\{0,1\}$ and is epistatically affected by $K$ other sites. When defining the model, Kauffman & Weinberger (1989) stressed…
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Why has grey hair evolved?

A vast majority of humans get at least some grey hair as they age. As far as I know this applies to both genders and all races. Presumably this means that at least some grey haired humans have noticeable reproductive advantage, or maybe they had it…
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What does fitness really mean?

Fitness is certainly the most important concept in the theory of evolution. My question does not have to do with practical measures of fitness but with the theoretical definition of it. I am a bit lost with the concept of fitness. Below I give some…
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What is the definition of "Natural Selection"?

Natural selection is the differential survival and reproduction of individuals due to differences in phenotype. Natural selection, a process that results in the adaptation of an organism to its environment by means of selectively reproducing…
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The evolutionary process in bird wings, especially with regard to winglets

In this answer on aviation.SE a comparison is made between the shapes of airplanes wings and the shapes of birds wings. It concludes with the following remark: After all, no bird has winglets. Not a single one. In addition to be a disputable…
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Are there any scientifically based predictions or theories of future human evolution?

Reading this question of the stack exchange got me thinking. I believe human evolution is an ongoing process and will not stop. Are there any predictions/theories about the phenotypes and genotypes of humans in the future? and how they may differ in…
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