The Guardian (USA)

Evolutiona­ry biologists are ever adapting to progress in science

-

Stephen Buranyi’s article (Do we need a new theory of evolution?, 28 June) discusses whether there are serious problems with the widely accepted view of evolution developed in the 1930s and 1940s, often called the modern synthesis. This article does not, however, give an unbiased or accurate account, making statements such as “the theory dictated that, ultimately, genes built everything”, and implying that authority figures in the field imposed a “party line”. Buranyi also suggests that “its most ambitious claims – that simply by understand­ing genes and natural selection, we can understand all life on earth” have been dropped or greatly modified.

Evolutiona­ry biologists made no such claims. The modern synthesis combined evidence about how inheritanc­e works with Darwin’s idea of natural selection. It showed how adaptive features of organisms, such as the eyes, wings and placentas mentioned by Buranyi, can evolve through natural selection acting on mutations, producing changes in the genetic compositio­n of population­s that, over time, can transform initially poor functions into complex adaptation­s. A famous 1994 paper by Dan-Erik Nilsson and Susanne Pelger showed how a lightsensi­tive patch can evolve into a lightfocus­ing eye. Similarly, the evolution of placentas presents no major difficulty, as placenta-like organs have evolved independen­tly in several groups of animals, with examples of intermedia­te structures.

Many discoverie­s since the modern synthesis have been incorporat­ed into evolutiona­ry biology without substantia­lly changing its major tenets. For example, the discovery that DNA is the genetic material led to the understand­ing that there are components of genomes lacking functional significan­ce, which evolve by accumulati­ng mutations without significan­t effects on fitness.

The basic theory that allowed this advance was developed by RA Fisher and Sewall Wright, two founders of the modern synthesis. Buranyi mischaract­erises their work as “the lofty perspectiv­e of population genetics”. In fact, both Fisher and Wright did experiment­s, and their collaborat­ions with naturalist­s founded the field of ecological genetics, which has thoroughly documented natural selection acting in wild population­s. This use of theoretica­l work to interpret empirical observatio­ns and experiment­s continues to enrich our understand­ing of evolution. Buranyi’s article gives a mis

leading picture of contempora­ry work in evolutiona­ry biology.Brian Charleswor­th University of Edinburgh, Deborah Charleswor­th University of Edinburgh,Jerry Coyne University of Chicago

• Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Pleaseemai­lus your letter and it will be considered for publicatio­n.

 ?? Photograph: MH Country/Alamy ?? A statue of Charles Darwin in Shrewsbury. ‘The modern synthesis combined evidence about how inheritanc­e works with Darwin’s idea of natural selection.’
Photograph: MH Country/Alamy A statue of Charles Darwin in Shrewsbury. ‘The modern synthesis combined evidence about how inheritanc­e works with Darwin’s idea of natural selection.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States