Questions tagged [evolution]

Changes in the heritable attributes of populations of organisms over time. The mechanisms of evolution are mutation, migration, drift, and selection.

Evolution is a change in gene frequencies, resulting from four mechanisms (mutation, migration, drift, and selection) which can all affect the transmission of heritable genetic information within populations.

Charles Darwin described evolution with the term "Descent with modification" to illustrate that (genetic) information, which can affect phenotypic traits, is inherited from parent to offspring, with the potential to be modified or altered with the passage of time.

" Evolution is [...] change between generations within a population lineage." 1

Questions on macro- and microevolutionary processes, speciation and divergence, the process of adaptation, effects of population genetics, etc. are generally on-topic. Questions about whether evolution is true, and other questions which would tend to illicit highly opinionated and poorly researched answers, are generally off-topic.

Before asking why a seemingly advantageous trait has not evolved see this post.

Understanding Evolution is a particularly useful introductory source and includes a large myth-busting section.


  1. Ridley, ISBN: 978-1-4051-0345-9
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How many times did terrestrial life emerge from the ocean?

Evolution is often mistakenly depicted as linear in popular culture. One main feature of this depiction in popular culture, but even in science popularisation, is that some ocean-dwelling animal sheds its scales and fins and crawls onto land. Of…
Konrad Rudolph
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If evolution is not about increased complexity, why does so much complexity evolve?

In my last question I asked why we don't see increased complexity in artificial life simulations of evolution. It seems I had fallen for a common misconception, that evolution was about improvement by increasing complexity. One comment discussing…
vonjd
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How is evolution possible in contemporary humans?

I would like to know if evolution is continuing to happen in modern humans, assuming things like existence of the nuclear family structure, fidelity to one partner, etc. It seems to me the answer would be NO because evolution depends on differential…
Joebevo
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Are there any examples of sudden leaps in evolution?

As far as I understand, various abilities like flying, sight, hearing etc. were caused by slow evolution, where those with a greater ability to to these things had better chance of survival. (If this assumption is wrong, then I am happy to delete…
David
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What evolutionary explanations are there for death?

I know death and cancer doesn't hurt humans' reproductive success. It's not helping either. Why do we die? Why dying humans (all of us) are common? What's the point of dying?
user4951
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Why do living fossils like crocodiles remain so constant and not evolve?

Crocodiles have supposedly remained unchanged for millions of years, and several other species are considered as "living fossils". How do such species remain so constant over time given that they will have had so much time to accumulate new…
Hammar
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Why didn't the polar bear change its color from white to black during evolution to absorb heat?

Polar bears are white in color and white color is not a good absorbant of heat. Why then didn't they evolve a black color to absorb more heat?
bhanu
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What is the most difficult feature to explain evolutionarily?

I wonder what are examples of organs/structures/behaviours/cooperation that evolutionary biologists themselves find most difficult to explain -- to explain how they could appear evolutionarily -- within known mutation rates, generation frequency,…
Andrei
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How does evolution produce complex organs

I've been wondering lately how evolution manages to produce complex organs. It is pretty obvious to me how evolution would select some minor traits like size, resistnce to illness or climate. There is a mutation where some organisms are slightly…
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Has the human 7-day week had any impact on the evolution of species?

Most (if not all) industrialized countries follow a 7-day work week now, such that we are bound to follow a certain weekly trend in matters such as pollution generation, where to go (e.g. stay in town during weekdays, more likely to go to parks…
Kal
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How do we know that our genetic similarities to other species is actually due to common ancestry?

I know all about how the fossil record shows more human-like species coming about over time, and how modern testing proves we have genetic similarities with other animals. All that says is we have similar genetic blueprints to animals in the past…
moonman239
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Why Did 6 Great Ape Species Survive But Only 1 Hominid Species?

My dad asked this question when I explained some circumstances surrounding Homo sapiens survival against all odds. We know there is only one hominid species left in the world, Homo sapiens. We also know that there are only 6 other species of great…
trysis
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Why did the urinary bladder evolve?

Sure it's convenient to decide when to urinate but not essential for survival or reproduction, as I understand. But just convenience is not a drive for evolution. Does the bladder serve any essential purpose? If not why did bladders evolve?
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Is there any evidence that a virus can modify human evolution

I was just reading Evolution of lactose tolerance, and in it one line says "But there was a time in human history when our diet and environment conspired to create conditions that mimicked those of a disease epidemic". Something I've always…
daven11
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Can species back-evolve?

One of the tenets of Darwin's theory is the survival of the fittest, ie adaptation of features that allow a species to adapt better to its surrounding environment. I am wondering that given the right conditions, is there a possibility of a more…
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