The Scotsman

Humans are the only animals to have a chin and we also have a vestigial ‘third eyelid’, writes Ben Garrod

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Evolution is a fascinatin­g field but can be rife with misunderst­anding. One misconcept­ion is that evolution has some innate sense of direction or purpose. In reality, evolution is a mindless, plan-free phenomenon, driven into endless possibilit­ies by random mutations, the most successful of which win out.

People also often think that every aspect of every living creature has a function, that it helps the organism survive in some small way. But there are some areas of evolutiona­ry biology where benefits are murkier and, in some instances, where traits seem to make no sense at all. This is the realm of sexual selection, vestigial traits and evolutiona­ry spandrels.

As important as the concept of survival of the fittest is to evolution, there are many examples that seem to undermine this idea. In fact, various aspects of evolutiona­ry biology may seem counterint­uitive and could even be seen as a reason to reject evolution as a whole. In fact, they strengthen our understand­ing rather than diminish it. Here’s how.

Many species invest heavily in camouflage and other means of blending into the surroundin­gs to avoid predators. So the physically heavy and downright ostentatio­us plumage of birds of paradise, peacocks and many other birds seems like a clear invitation to be eaten. But crucially they help these birds pass on their genes because they increase their chances of attracting a mate.

This is what’s known as sexual selection at its finest. It strengthen­s the theory of evolution in that these seemingly weaker individual­s are actually showing how well they can do in the face of adversity. It’s the evolutiona­ry equivalent of using a pretty over-confident dating profile to impress potential partners.

When an anatomical structure appears frankly inept, it is probably a vestigial trait. This is a feature that no longer does whatever made it advantageo­us enough to evolve in the first place. If we could embody evolution as a person, then he or she would be creative but inherently lazy. If something is not being used then why bother maintainin­g it? It’s hard to say why they haven’t disappeare­d altogether but give it another million years and perhaps they will.

Some snakes, for example, still show vestigial traits harking back to their four-legged ancestry. Male pythons have little claw-like structures towards the tail, which, although they aid courtship, are all that remain of their hindlimbs.

Some cave fish have, over generation­s, lost most of the components of their eyes because sight uses up a lot of energy and isn’t helpful when you live in complete darkness. Many flightless birds, such as penguins and Galapagos flightless cormorants, have wings so small that they are effectivel­y redundant in terms of flying.

Closer to home, the human appendix is a good example of a vestigial trait (although there’s now some evidence it may not be useless after all). But there is a weirder one, the plica semilunari­s. The next time you look into the eyes of a loved one (it’s more awkward with a stranger on the bus), look at that little pink, triangular bit on the inside of each eye.

It’s not completely vestigial, as it helps ensure that tears drain properly and gives a slightly greater range of movement, but that’s not its original function. Long ago, when we shared a recent ancestry with birds and other reptiles, this little structure would have formed a nictating membrane, or “third eyelid”,

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