Ongoing Evolution
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EVOLUTION: Biology. Change in the gene pool of a population from generation to generation by such processes as mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift.
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150-years ago Charles Darwin published his masterwork, On the Origin of Species, and the religious community has been all a-twitter ever since.
As much as I'd enjoy debating evolution vs. intelligent design with a fanatic, this piece just isn't about that. It's about evolution - or more to the point, the ongoing evolution which is taking place, here and now, all around us. And yeah, that includes Man.
For decades preeminent biologists have held the view that any significant evolution hadn't occurred for many thousands of years, and that human evolution in particular had become all but irrelevant since the emergence of Homo sapiens 50,000 years ago. But, the fact is, humans are still evolving, and the evolutionary changes taking place at this very moment are undeniable.
Below, are just two staggering examples that evolution is indeed marching on.
The Humble Earthworm: Eco-Warrior
An abandoned copper mine contaminated by run-off from industrial waste is being reclaimed by an unusual army of eco-warriors: metal-eating earthworms. Deposits of metal at sites where these worms are found creates a unique evolutionary event, yielding organisms that thrive in highly polluted environments.
"If you took an earthworm from the back of your garden and put it in these soils, it would die," said researcher Mark Hodson of the University of England in Reading.
Discovered in abandoned mines in England and Wales, these highly evolved superworms devour toxic heavy metals like lead, arsenic and copper. DNA analysis of lead-tolerant worms revealed subtle changes in the worms' make-up that were induced by the metals, and sensitive X-rays technology was used to track how the worms metabolized metal particles one-thousandth the size of a grain of salt. "These earthworms have developed adaptive mechanisms for dealing with the soil pollution," Mark Hodson says."When they ingest the soil, the metal accumulates in their tissues. But they have modified calcium pathways and secrete an enzyme that converts the metal into a less toxic form."
When the worms process the polluted soil, they excrete a slightly different version that is easier for plants to absorb. Eventually, we might be able to recruit these earthworms to accelerate the remediation process and to clean up contaminated sites.
Man: Evolving to Survive
Malaria is about 35,000 years old, with the most lethal form of it just 5,000 years old. Yet in sub-Saharan Africa and other regions where it is endemic, people have developed at least 25 new genes that protect against malaria ... including the Duffy blood type (or DARC gene) , an entirely new blood group.
More recently HIV resistance has appeared due to a genetic mutation now found in 10% of Europeans. Scientists speculate that the variant may have originally evolved as a protection against smallpox.
Paralleling the constant battle against pathogens, human sperm is evolving at higher speed, driven by the race to get to the egg before another man's sperm. And at the other end of human life span, genes which help us live longer are being selected. Evolutionary biologists previously believed that the elderly do not contribute to the gene pool and were hence invisible to natural selection, but studies have shown that children doted on by their grandmother are more likely to survive and pass on their grandmother's genes for longevity. The phenomenon is known as the "grandmother effect."
To many evolutionary biologists, suggesting that humans have undergone an evolutionary makeover from the Stone Age to present day would be nothing short of blasphemous. But modern research is doing just that. They've found an abundance of recent adaptive mutations etched in the human genome and, even more shocking, these mutations seem to be piling up faster and faster, like an avalanche of evolution. Their data shows that over the past 10,000 years human evolution has occured a hundred times more quickly than in any other period in our species' history.
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I know it sometimes seems that the race of Man is determined exterminate itself. With our bloodlust for wars and killing, our ongoing destruction of our own environment, emerging supergerms due to our overuse of antibiotics, and so on, and so on ... But, to paraphrase Jeff Goldbloom in Jurassic park - Life, it would seem, is finding a way.
You can read more about this and related articles at DiscoverMagazine's Website
There's an incredible video series by the BBC titled "Journey of Life" after the comments - if you're so inclined ...
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Journey of Life ~ Human Life
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Evolution
Price: $81.38
List Price: $110.00 |
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Making Sense of Evolution: The Conceptual Foundations of Evolutionary Biology
Price: $23.94
List Price: $28.00 |
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It's Not You, It's Biology.: The Science of Love, Sex, and Relationships
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Comments
Considering that the rate of evolution is based on hundreds of thousands of years at least, and in the micro level yet, I hope scientists everywhere work faster and harder for complete evolutionary "changes" might just be waiting to be discovered. A fascinating read, and very positive too. Thanks for sharing the good news and your optimism :D
-Tom, thanks. Yeah, I think these seperworms will be very useful the world over.
-Cris, Your welcome. True that evolution typically takes that long, but HIV-resistant genes seem to be evolving amazingly fast.
Great hub and information. Nature is fascinating.
Keep on hubbing!
Thank you Eovery, and I agree: nature IS fascinating.
Amazing info, CW! I had no idea about the new blood type or the evolution of genes. I'm glad I stopped by on this one. I'm bookmarking it. Thumbs up. And it seems you changed the picture at the top while I was commenting. Excellent!
Thanks Frieda. So much going on in nature (actual good things!) that it's hard to keep up.
Yeah, it switched places with the one below.
Loved the pic "evolving soul" and the hub was great too...
the worms amaze me but then God's work is the best...a new blood type??? I tried to read about that but just too complicated for this mind...quite a big article about it though...just wish it was in a way to understand in fewer words...I am simple...
thanks for the interesting information and very well presented...G-Ma:O) hugs 7 Peace
Thank you, G-Ma. Don't worry, all the specifics were too complicated for me, too. But, I wanted to have a reference there for the uber-brains - like Science Guru.
The "new blood type" blows me away, too. That's honest to goodness Man evolving ... right before our eyes!
Metal eating earthworms?...I think someones been spending a little too much time in the comic book store!
I have seen solid evidence of men's evolution here on Hub Pages!
Great hub Cw It shows how you too are evolving!
Great vidoes too!
-Funne, ha-ha. Maybe graphic novelists have been spending too much time in the science library! hmm...
-MM, really? Seriously?
-Sixty, wow that's deep ... and very flattering. Thank you!
CW that was truly a really interesting article I am with G-Ma with understanding blood types. I am just a simple gal that lives on a mountain.Wow Mighty Mom gave a very interesting comment as well. Really well done CW, thumbs up and bravo. I am off to shoot some dudes in Halo now, my rocket is fully loaded.Watch out fellas,the power is on its way.
BP, If I understood the Duffy (dfy) blood type better, I'd try to explain it better, but that level of science is over my head, too.
I think the important things to remember (and celebrate) are: It is making humans resistant to malaria, and, it is a recently evolved aspect of human genetics!
Malaria kills so many people -- the idea that humans can build up resistance to it is cause for celebration indeed, whether we understande the science or not. Thanks for this information. I don't need to subscribe to magazines OR newspapers with you around!
Thanks, Teresa. I really enjoy updating Numerous Fragments each morning. Something waiting for me to do, but not as involved in doing an actual story.
My God I'm lazy!
You are very clever CW.
Ha-ha, Thanks!
Great hub and videos, Constant Walker! My brain is now just that bit bigger!;)
Ha-ha, thanks Compu. Then my work here is done.
Ode to the worms...very interesting CW, we are changing, eh? =))
Hi M. Yep, always evolving.
good to see you on TOP of things!!! =)) How's life treating you lately??
I'm OK, thank you, and you?
Hey, AW - Everything is fine, thanks - a lot of work, so I have not been on HP as much as usual. You?
Interesting Hub - A few ideas there to mull over! I had heard of bacteria and plants digesting heavy metals, but never worms. It is nice to be educated once in a while :)
I agree, I love to learn new fascinating stuff like this.
Yes, evolution does continue to this very day, despite what some people claim that it never occurred in the first place. I do not "believe" in evolution - I know it is a fact. One does not believe the sun appears to come up, one simply knows that each day the sun will appear to come up in the East and set in the West.
Evolution is fact, even if the process is still being studied and discovered.
Great hub!
Good point, Jeff. With the overwhelming proof that Earth has existid for billions of years (I think it's believed to be 4.5 billion), it is head-in-the-sand syndrome to the point of being whimsical to insist everything came into being two-to-three thousand years ago.
The image of someone with fingers firmly in ears going "La-la-la-la!" comes to mind.
Evolution theory is supported by a series of facts. Some are genetic, anthropological, biochemical, biological, paleological, and molecular chemistry. Evolution, right now, is the only theory that can explain biological change.
Well said, GGarza. Thanks for reading.

























Tom Rubenoff says:
9 months ago
Fascinating hub, well done. Once in a sci-fi book I read how settlers on a far away planet used genetic mutation to enhance the local wildlife into better food sources and even means of planetary defense. They need lead-eating earthworms now in places like Taiwan and Korea, where lead acid battery prodution has resulted in polution.