Pop Quiz: Evolution

The always exceptional Pharyngula points us to the National Center for Science Education’s responses to Dr. Jonathan Wells’ “Ten Questions to Ask Your Biology Teacher.” None of Wells’ critiques are new, but the NCSE’s responses are pointed and concise, and deserve the widest distribution possible. As such, they are pasted below the fold.

Q: ORIGIN OF LIFE. Why do textbooks claim that the 1953 Miller-Urey experiment shows how life's building blocks may have formed on the early Earth -- when conditions on the early Earth were probably nothing like those used in the experiment, and the origin of life remains a mystery?

A: Because evolutionary theory works with any model of the origin of life on Earth, how life originated is not a question about evolution. Textbooks discuss the 1953 studies because they were the first successful attempt to show how organic molecules might have been produced on the early Earth. When modern scientists changed the experimental conditions to reflect better knowledge of the Earth's early atmosphere, they were able to produce most of the same building blocks. Origin-of-life remains a vigorous area of research.

Q: DARWIN'S TREE OF LIFE. Why don't textbooks discuss the "Cambrian explosion," in which all major animal groups appear together in the fossil record fully formed instead of branching from a common ancestor -- thus contradicting the evolutionary tree of life?

A: Wells is wrong: fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals all are post-Cambrian - aren't these "major groups"? We would recognize very few of the Cambrian organisms as "modern"; they are in fact at the roots of the tree of life, showing the earliest appearances of some key features of groups of animals - but not all features and not all groups. Researchers are linking these Cambrian groups using not only fossils but also data from developmental biology.

Q: HOMOLOGY. Why do textbooks define homology as similarity due to common ancestry, then claim that it is evidence for common ancestry -- a circular argument masquerading as scientific evidence?

A: The same anatomical structure (such as a leg or an antenna) in two species may be similar because it was inherited from a common ancestor (homology) or because of similar adaptive pressure (convergence). Homology of structures across species is not assumed, but tested by the repeated comparison of numerous features that do or do not sort into successive clusters. Homology is used to test hypotheses of degrees of relatedness. Homology is not "evidence" for common ancestry: common ancestry is inferred based on many sources of information, and reinforced by the patterns of similarity and dissimilarity of anatomical structures.

Q: VERTEBRATE EMBRYOS. Why do textbooks use drawings of similarities in vertebrate embryos as evidence for their common ancestry -- even though biologists have known for over a century that vertebrate embryos are not most similar in their early stages, and the drawings are faked?

A: Twentieth-century and current embryological research confirms that early stages (if not the earliest) of vertebrate embryos are more similar than later ones; the more recently species shared a common ancestor, the more similar their embryological development. Thus cows and rabbits - mammals - are more similar in their embryological development than either is to alligators. Cows and antelopes are more similar in their embryology than either is to rabbits, and so on. The union of evolution and developmental biology - "evo-devo" - is one of the most rapidly growing biological fields. "Faked" drawings are not relied upon: there has been plenty of research in developmental biology since Haeckel - and in fact, hardly any textbooks feature Haeckel's drawings, as claimed.

Q: ARCHAEOPTERYX. Why do textbooks portray this fossil as the missing link between dinosaurs and modern birds -- even though modern birds are probably not descended from it, and its supposed ancestors do not appear until millions of years after it?

A: The notion of a "missing link" is an out-of-date misconception about how evolution works. Archaeopteryx (and other feathered fossils) shows how a branch of reptiles gradually acquired both the unique anatomy and flying adaptations found in all modern birds. It is a transitional fossil in that it shows both reptile ancestry and bird specializations. Wells's claim that "supposed ancestors" are younger than Archaeopteryx is false. These fossils are not ancestors but relatives of Archaeopteryx and, as everyone knows, your uncle can be younger than you!

Q: PEPPERED MOTHS. Why do textbooks use pictures of peppered moths camouflaged on tree trunks as evidence for natural selection -- when biologists have known since the 1980s that the moths don't normally rest on tree trunks, and all the pictures have been staged?

A: These pictures are illustrations used to demonstrate a point - the advantage of protective coloration to reduce the danger of predation. The pictures are not the scientific evidence used to prove the point in the first place. Compare this illustration to the well-known re-enactments of the Battle of Gettysburg. Does the fact that these re-enactments are staged prove that the battle never happened? The peppered moth photos are the same sort of illustration, not scientific evidence for natural selection.

Q: DARWIN'S FINCHES. Why do textbooks claim that beak changes in Galapagos finches during a severe drought can explain the origin of species by natural selection -- even though the changes were reversed after the drought ended, and no net evolution occurred?

A: Textbooks present the finch data to illustrate natural selection: that populations change their physical features in response to changes in the environment. The finch studies carefully - exquisitely - documented how the physical features of an organism can affect its success in reproduction and survival, and that such changes can take place more quickly than was realized. That new species did not arise within the duration of the study hardly challenges evolution!

Q: MUTANT FRUIT FLIES. Why do textbooks use fruit flies with an extra pair of wings as evidence that DNA mutations can supply raw materials for evolution -- even though the extra wings have no muscles and these disabled mutants cannot survive outside the laboratory?

A: In the very few textbooks that discuss four-winged fruit flies, they are used as an illustration of how genes can reprogram parts of the body to produce novel structures, thus indeed providing "raw material" for evolution. This type of mutation produces new structures that become available for further experimentation and potential new uses. Even if not every mutation leads to a new evolutionary pathway, the flies are a vivid example of one way mutation can provide variation for natural selection to work on.

Q: HUMAN ORIGINS. Why are artists' drawings of ape-like humans used to justify materialistic claims that we are just animals and our existence is a mere accident -- when fossil experts cannot even agree on who our supposed ancestors were or what they looked like?

A: Drawings of humans and our ancestors illustrate the general outline of human ancestry, about which there is considerable agreement, even if new discoveries continually add to the complexity of the account. The notion that such drawings are used to "justify materialistic claims" is ludicrous and not borne out by an examination of textbook treatments of human evolution.

Q: EVOLUTION A FACT? Why are we told that Darwin's theory of evolution is a scientific fact -- even though many of its claims are based on misrepresentations of the facts?

A: What does Wells mean by "Darwin's theory of evolution"? In the last century, some of what Darwin originally proposed has been augmented by more modern scientific understanding of inheritance (genetics), development, and other processes that affect evolution. What remains unchanged is that similarities and differences among living things on Earth over time and space display a pattern that is best explained by evolutionary theory. Wells's "10 Questions" fails to demonstrate a pattern of evolutionary biologists' "misrepresenting the facts."

With regard to question no. 7

With regard to question number seven.... a little more needs to be said. Wells asks how it is that the finches could "revert" so quickly, saying that "no net evolution ocurred."

The word "evolution" is hobbled by its common use in english to describe a progression of events or forms. Evolution is most emphatically NOT a progression - just changing frequncies of genes and their alleles over time. It is opportunistic and IRREVERSIBLE.

If a human population is selected in such a fashion that strongly favors folks with one eye (congenital, mind you), then successful reproduction for cyclopses would increase dramatically. Should selection *pressures* revert to favoring binocular humans, the only way two-eyes *geno/phenotype* would return is by bottlenecking of surviving two-eyeses, expression of latent two-eyed genes, or mutation(s) in the gene(s) controlling eye number.

There is no such thing as "net evolution" - in fact, you could say that a population shifting from phenotype A to B and then back to A sustains *more* evolution than if it had simply shifted from A to B.

I know I'm probably preaching to the choir here, but misunderstanding and even misrepresentation of evolution occur so often it frightens me. 49 percent of American professionals may think they believe in evolution, but I'll bet that 90 percent of *that* group thinks that it's some kind of refining fire - exactly the kind of thinking that leads us to hold ourselves above the natural world and, at unfortunate times, each other.

better answer

While I think that the intention of the authors at the NCSE was identical to yours, Christine, I agree that their response was less than transparent. Your cyclops example is perhaps a bit clearer.

Since the popular understanding of evolution is certainly a "progression," this seems a good opportunity to recommend Stephen Jay Gould's book Full House. It's an excellent read for anyone interested in evolution or baseball.

Pop quiz

Thanks for that - I saw these questions and was hard pressed to answer all of them. Here in Australia we have much less of the Fundamentalist Christian bit so we have almost no pressure to teach creation. Certainly my children would have given the teacher a hard time if they had started and I would have been up to the school 5 mins later.

Christine:

Very good points. On my walk to work this morning I was thinking about common misunderstandings of evolution and, sadly, I'm certain your guesstimate regarding the percentage of people who view evolution as a "refining fire" is accurate. Part of the problem is the teaching of evolution. Many teachers still present the subject matter as an almost Lamarckian phenomenon.

I would think that teachers w

I would think that teachers would welcome these questions. It seems maybe they are too worried about keeping on schedule... deviating from the notes... not having the 'right' answers. I think they need to get over it. These kids do not need to know the facts, most forget them anyway. I would like to see children taught how to think for themselves... it really doesn't matter to me if they are taught evolution or creationism or whatever theory. They need to be able to take in information and decide for themselves if it is good or not. I talk to people everyday who 'know' the facts, but have no idea what they are talking about... they're easy to spot too because all you have to do is ask them a question about what they are claiming to know.

just the facts, ma'am

You pretty much lost your credibility at "These kids do not need to know the facts..." In fact, this goes right up there with "students are not penalized for incorrect facts."

I guess I dont really need yo

I guess I dont really need you to believe me... I usually start to worry when too many people do. To make a long story short, I would rather talk/discuss with a 'thinker' than a 'knower'.

"These kids do not need to know the facts..." does not translate to "These kids do not need to be told the facts..."

false dichotomy

Apparently I need to say more. In your first comment you create a distinction between teaching facts and teaching critical thinking, and I should note that we agree that critical thinking is one of the most important skills that a student can master. What I disagree with is your apparent belief that there is some sort of tradeoff between teaching students how to think and teaching them facts.

Proponents of intelligent design creationism would have it taught in schools as a legitimate challenge to evolutionary theory. This teaches students neither facts nor critical thinking, since IDC isn’t a legitimate challenge to evolution. I would have no issue whatsoever with a teacher introducing IDC and explaining why it falls to pieces under critical evaluation (see original post), but that’s not what has been at issue in recent news.

Its not so much that there ne

Its not so much that there needs to be a tradeoff, but as I remember, teachers seemed to be too hung up on factual recall instead of testing to find out if the student understood the material. I admit, I am not a teacher, so I do not know what they have to go through to teach anything to kids. Maybe its easier to just preach to them and not let much in the form of opinion/ideas get in the way. I do know that teachers that helped me the most where the ones that made me question what I thought I knew...

last chance

This conversation is going nowhere fast, but, I’ll humor the thread with just one more post, unless something changes radically. You make a reasonable argument that there’s more to learning than just memorizing facts, but I still don’t get why you’re belaboring this point on a thread about evolution. I’m not gonna lie – it kind of sounds like you’re speaking in generalities because you want to take issue with evolution itself, but don’t have substance to back up the argument. If I’ve mischaracterized your posts, then I apologize. But if I’m right, fess up to it and apply some of this critical thinking you speak so authoritatively of to argue your real agenda.

(“Agenda” sounds awfully loaded, but they’re just like assholes – everybody’s got one. Except Michael Crichton, of course.)

My apologies... I did not mea

My apologies... I did not mean to take up your time and was not fishing for a creation/evolution discussion. I will try to keep any future comments/questions on topic.