Moderators: gmalivuk, Moderators General, Prelates
andqso wrote:The whole notion of sex is always the one that blows my mind. "Hey guys, let's make our offspring more fit by delaying reproduction in order to randomly exchange genetic material!"
But it works.
HistidineTheCat wrote:Now THAT's a whole new can of worms you just opened there!
Keep in mind with aquatic organisms that the idea of osmotic balance comes very strongly into play. Marine organisms are hypotonic to the surrounding environment (so, the ocean wants to steal their water) and freshwater organisms tend to be hypertonic (so the surrounding water either wants to flood them or steal their salts).Izawwlgood wrote:You guys misunderstood me about urine. I'm talking aquatic critters. I'm talking squishy blobs of slug like thingy. But yes, the point is that it's a delayed metabolic activity. Like, ahhh, this ammonia is really bad for me, i'll turn it into urea, and HOLD ONTO IT, until later, when I'm pretty sure theres no predators around. Instead of being like blahblahblah, eating and breathing, breathing and venting ammonia...
HistidineTheCat wrote:psyck0 wrote:To the OP: Your examples (if used to state that evolution was wrong) fall into the "I can't imagine how it happened, therefore it cannot have happened" method of 'proof', which is completely flawed. Remember that evolution works in tiny, tiny, TINY steps. Imagining such a gradual process can be hard, but when the mechanism is found it will ALWAYS seem astonishingly simple BECAUSE evolution has to work with such small steps. There are no big changes that just spring into being, and so the process HAS to be simple and logical. That is why everyone is so amazed at how evolution can be so 'simple', and yet show such dramatic results.
There are probably a few exceptions that I don't know about/can't remember right now.
Mr. Beck already pointed out that you completely missed the point of the thread. But I gotta also point out that no, evolution is NOT simple. It is not even close. In fact, evolution is the single most complicated thing I have ever come across. If you think it's simple, then you haven't REALLY studied it.
Evolution isn't simply a series of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in coding sequences genetically drifting towards a superior critter. Evolution happens through gene duplications, truncations, rearrangements, and homologous crossovers. It happens through exon splicing, gene sharing, DNA transferral, viruses, and transposons. A significant portion of evolution is shifts in regulation under different cellular conditions. Gene expression at different times in development can drastically change how a critter looks, or it can create entirely new uses for old proteins (gene sharing). These changes can be in any kind of regulatory gene (or a DNA region to which the regulatory protein binds) - look up Hox genes, gap genes, pair-rule genes, segment polarity genes, maternal-effect genes.
There is nothing simple about evolution.
I'd recommend the book Gene Sharing and Evolution by Piatigorsky if you're interested in capturing just a tiny snippet of how complicated evolution is.
gmalivuk wrote:Roland Lockheart wrote:My question: the lamprey. What is it? It is a long rubber tube filled with teeth and an insatiable appetite for blood. WTF!?!?!?
The lamprey, like all parasites, must originally have evolved as an independent organism. Probably once it found a niche parasitizing other animals, a number of traits became unnecessary, and were gradually lost over time as natural selection favored those genomes that sapped less energy growing and maintaining pointless parts and used more to improve its efficiency as a parasite.
psyck0 wrote: I did not miss the point. That's why I added the "if used to state that evolution was wrong" caveat. I just remembered the term for that logical flaw, as well, so I'll add it now- the argument from personal incredulity. Additionally, evolution IS simple. The genetic mechanisms by which it occurs are not (hence "integrated evolution", or whatever the modern term is for studying the genetic basis is, NOT being simple), but you will see a very simple and logical series of phenotypic progressions virtually all the time. And the point of this thread is to talk about the phenotypic progressions, not about the genetic basis, because often we're clueless as to what exact genetic change occured to cause the phenotypic shift.
Izawwlgood wrote:The more biology I learn, the more I find support for the notion that "Nature does it better". Find me an engineering success humans have had and nature has probably solved the problem as well.
Izawwlgood wrote:The more biology I learn, the more I find support for the notion that "Nature does it better". Find me an engineering success humans have had and nature has probably solved the problem as well.
Izawwlgood wrote:The more biology I learn, the more I find support for the notion that "Nature does it better". Find me an engineering success humans have had and nature has probably solved the problem as well.
Mr_Rose wrote:Although, possibly not bridges. We're really good at those, but even army ants and other mobile colony creatures generally just make pontoons rather than real bridges.
alexh123456789 wrote:Izawwlgood wrote:The more biology I learn, the more I find support for the notion that "Nature does it better". Find me an engineering success humans have had and nature has probably solved the problem as well.
Guns. Nature has been trying to kill stuff right since life started, but humans still win that contest
Izawwlgood wrote:Read up on the Bombardier Beetle. There's also a caterpillar that projects it's feces a couple meters away from itself (the thing is maybe 2 inches long) by exploding blood vessels by it's anus. Yes. Exploding. Blood vessels. Anus.
I wasn't referring to scale projects (theres no Hoover Dam of the animal kingdom), but just about everything we've tried to do, nature has a solution for.
Also, a number of organisms have been found to survive the rigors of vacuum, including dealing with radiation hundreds of times what roaches can sustain.
Random832 wrote:Superman in particular probably had a chance to try those skills on farm animals first....
Roland Lockheart wrote:I find this interesting, do you know any examples (of organisms that survive in a vacuum)? If I had to guess I would probably say some sort of mollusk or insect.
gmalivuk wrote:Roland Lockheart wrote:I find this interesting, do you know any examples (of organisms that survive in a vacuum)? If I had to guess I would probably say some sort of mollusk or insect.
I would guess something much, much smaller, actually.
gedtheflayer wrote:Makes me wonder if anyone has done cell biology experiments in zero gravity conditions.[/off topic]
gmalivuk wrote:Roland Lockheart wrote:I find this interesting, do you know any examples (of organisms that survive in a vacuum)? If I had to guess I would probably say some sort of mollusk or insect.
I would guess something much, much smaller, actually.
I imagine that since anaerobic bacteria can produce energy without access to oxygen, they might survive for a little while in a vacuum. However, the problem comes when you think about naturally occuring vacuums. The big one is space, which in addition to the vacuum problem has no gravity to speak of and probably not enough organic material floating around to sustain most life. Then again, that doesn't rule out chemosynthetic bacteria, such as those found in underwater geothermal vents. So, it is reasonably possible for bacteria to live in space, if they have a proper chemical source (perhaps they could secrete an enzyme to break down their rocky "food", but that would bring up the problem of getting enough peptides to sustain it).
andqso wrote:The whole notion of sex is always the one that blows my mind. "Hey guys, let's make our offspring more fit by delaying reproduction in order to randomly exchange genetic material!"
But it works.
Steve Strogatz, an applied mathematician at Cornell, tells us about a radical theory that says that way back at the beginning of life, 3 billion years ago, life was a big commune of gene swapping. Nigel Goldenfeld, one of the scientists who came up with this theory, says that the idea of different species, and consequently Darwinian evolution, simply didn’t apply for the first billion years of life on Earth.
erik542 wrote:I'm having a debate on another site with a creationist. I've more or less been challenged to explain the ten commandments. I did the real obvious explanation of murder, and a passable to them explanation of adultery. What I am having problems with is finding a good explanation for thievery.
Charlie! wrote:If a group all has the same "cooperation" gene, that group as a whole is more likely to survive and spread their genes than some rabble that can't cooperate.
gmalivuk wrote:Charlie! wrote:If a group all has the same "cooperation" gene, that group as a whole is more likely to survive and spread their genes than some rabble that can't cooperate.
Though that's true, it's not evolutionarily stable. Because a single individual without that gene can come in and take advantage of the altruism of the rest of the group, and then do better reproductively than the lot of them.