Saint Louis Beacon

Wednesday
Nov 19th
           | 
 
Home arrow Health/Science arrow Putting evolution to the test
Putting evolution to the test Print E-mail
By George Johnson, Special to the Beacon   
Last Updated ( Friday, 23 May 2008 )

The Missouri House Education Committee is considering this session an outrageous bill that attacks Missouri education while claiming to improve it. Submitted by Republican Rep. Wayne Cooper of Camdenton as the "Missouri Science Education Act," HB 2554 purports to improve science teaching in Missouri by helping students develop critical thinking skills. Teachers would have to clearly identify what is "verified empirical data" and distinguish it from what is "theory, hypothesis, conjecture, speculation" and the like.

'on science'

Photo of George JohnsonGeorge B. Johnson is bringing his "On Science" column to the St Louis Platform. This column, which appeared for several years in the Post-Dispatch, looks at scientific issues and explains them in an accessible manner. There is no dumbing down in Johnson's writing, rather he uses analogy and precise terms to open the world of science to others.

Johnson, Ph.D., professor emeritus of Biology at Washington University, has taught biology and genetics to undergraduates for more than 30 years. Also professor of genetics at Washington University’s School of Medicine, Johnson is a student of population genetics and evolution, renowned for his pioneering studies of genetic variability.

He has authored more than 50 scientific publications and seven texts, including "BIOLOGY" (with botanist Peter Raven), "THE LIVING WORLD" and a widely used high school biology textbook, "HOLT BIOLOGY."

As the founding director of The Living World, the education center at the St Louis Zoo, from 1987 to 1990, he was responsible for developing innovative high-tech exhibits and new educational programs.

Practically the same bill was considered by this committee last session as HB 1266.

What are we to make of this?

Opponents of these bills say their real goal is to undercut the teaching of evolution in classrooms by requiring teachers to describe evolution as "just a theory," not "verified empirical data." If this is indeed the goal of the bill’s sponsors, then they might be interested to see how Darwin's theory of evolution fares when subjected to the sort of critical analysis these bills mandate.

So let's do it. Let's put evolution to the test for teachers: "Verified empirical data" or "just a theory"?

If you think about it, Darwin's assertion that organisms have evolved from a series of simpler ancestors implies that a record of evolutionary change is present in the cells of each of us, in our DNA. According to evolutionary theory, new varieties arise from older ones by changes in genes, and come to predominance through favorable selection.

A series of evolutionary changes thus implies a continual accumulation of genetic changes in the DNA. From this, you can see that evolutionary theory makes a clear prediction: Two species that are more distantly related (for example, humans and mice) should have accumulated a greater number of evolutionary differences than two species that are more closely related (say, humans and chimpanzees).

So have they? Let's compare vertebrate species to see.

humantree2.jpg

The "family tree" above shows how biologists believe 18 different vertebrate species are related. The wealth of genomes (a "genome" is all the DNA that an organism possesses) that have been sequenced in recent months since completion of the human genome project allows us to directly compare the DNA of these 18 vertebrates.

To reduce the size of the task, investigators at the National Human Genome Research Institute working at the University of California, Santa Cruz, focused on 44 so-called ENCODE regions scattered around the vertebrate genome. These regions, corresponding to 30 Mb (megabase, or thousand bases) or roughly 1 percent of the total human genome, were selected to be representative of the genome as a whole, containing protein-encoding genes as well as "junk" DNA.

For each vertebrate species, the investigators determined the similarity of its DNA to that of humans -- that is, the percent of the nucleotides in that organism's 44 ENCODE regions that match those of the human genome.

You can see the result in each instance presented as a number above the picture of each organism on the vertebrate family tree. As Darwin's theory predicts, the closer the relatives, the less the genomic difference we see. The chimpanzee genome is more like the human genome (91 percent) than the monkey genomes are (72-79 percent).

In general, as you proceed through the taxonomic categories of the vertebrate family tree from very distant relatives on the right (in the same class) to very close ones on the left (in the same family), you can see clearly that genomic similarity increases as taxonomic distance decreases -- just as Darwin's theory predicts. The prediction of evolutionary theory is solidly confirmed.

Nor do we have to stop the analysis here. The evolutionary history of the vertebrates is quite well known from fossils, and because many of these fossils have been independently dated using tools such as radioisotope dating, it is possible to recast the analysis in terms of concrete intervals of time, and assess directly whether or not vertebrate genomes accumulate more differences over longer periods of time as Darwin's theory predicts.

graphgj.jpgFor each of the 17 vertebrates being analyzed, the graph to the right plots genomic similarity -- how alike the DNA sequence of the vertebrate's ENCODE regions are to those of the human genome -- against divergence time (that is, how many millions of years have elapsed since that vertebrate and humans shared a common ancestor in the fossil record). Thus, the last common ancestor shared by chickens and humans was an early reptile called a dicynodont that lived some 240 million years ago.

Similarly, humans and all other land vertebrates are descendants of the recently discovered Tiktaalik "walking fish," which shared a common ancestor with other fishes 375 million years ago.

The result seen in the graph is striking and very clear: Over their more than 400 million year history, vertebrates have accumulated more and more genetic change in their DNA. Since humans and chickens diverged 240 million years ago, the genomes of the two species have changed so much that only 7 percent of their ENCODE sequences are still the same. Humans and fish diverged even longer ago, and their DNA is even more different, with only 2 percent of ENCODE sequences remaining the same.

"Descent with modification" was Darwin's definition of evolution, and that is exactly what we see in the graph. The evolution of the vertebrate genome is not a theory, but an observation.

The wealth of data made available by the human genome project has allowed a clearer look at the evidence for evolution than ever before. The conclusion to which it leads us is that evolution is an observed fact, clearly revealed in the data. Thus, under the terms of HB 2554, evolution must be taught to Missouri schoolchildren as "verified empirical data." Any teacher not doing so would be in clear violation of the statute. I suspect this is not the outcome envisioned when this bill was submitted.

When HB 1266 was considered by the House Education Committee last year, it was reported out of committee with a "do pass" recommendation, but did not come up for a vote before the end of this year's term. Now that it has reappeared as HB 2554, legislators would do well to read it carefully.

Copyright Txtwriter Inc.

 

Editors' Picks

  • Health and Science
    • Genital surgery for women increasing: More women opt for plastic surgery below the belt, sparking outrage among those who oppose the "medicalization of sex." l Time

    • Inside a flu vaccine factory: What it's like to go viral -- a first person account from a former worker who has doubts about whether flu shots work all that well. l Newsweek

    • Keep forgetting where you left the keys? It's not necessarly Alzheimer's. Sort out the symptoms and learn how to protect against memory loss with this package of stories. l Los Angeles Times

    • Families go waaaaay back: A stone-age grave site discovered in central Germany suggests the nuclear family is at least 4,600 years old. The grave contains the remains of a man, woman and their two children
      "Their unity in death suggests unity in life," researchers said in Tuesday's edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.lAssociated Press

 

Jazz with Jerome Harris

Video by Christian Cudnik

Jazz musician and educator Jerome Harris talks about the importance of teaching. See a larger version of this video and read a profile of Harris

Brain Surgery Breakthrough

St. Louis pioneers a new technology allowing doctors to visualize the brain and its functions during surgery.

Produced by Al Wiman at the St. Louis Science Center for the St. Louis Beacon

Voices

  • Editorial Cartoons

    sstantis100transition.jpgThe presidential ransition still gets lots of attention, but the cartoonists are also looking at specific economic and social issues. Find the work of Scott Stantis, John Sherffius, Chris Britt, Marshall Ramsey and Mike Thompson inside.

  • In the News

    soa100puppet.jpgPosted 5 p.m. Mon. Nov. 17 - This weekend, nearly a hundred St. Louisans, many of them high school students, will travel to Fort Benning, GA to protest the School of the Americas. Among its graduates are some of Latin America's most notorious dictators, guilty of some of the continent's most savage human rights violations. Rachel Heidenry, who participated in the protest while a student at Nerinx Hall and Bard College, describes the experience and took the photographs that accompany the story and are in a slideshow at the end of the article.

  • Law Scoop

    supremecourt100.jpg

    Posted, 1:20 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 13 - Not often do the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court admit to such bafflement as they did on Wednesday when trying to decide if Pleasant Grove City, Utah has to add the 7 Aphorisms to the 10 Commandments in its city park.

The Lens

Giving Back

The Beacon wants to help you share the news about good deeds St. Louisans are doing. See our spotlight on those who are giving back.

pulitzerheader.jpg

The Beacon features links to the latest work by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.This Washington-based non-profit organization promotes in-depth international coverage of topics that have been under-reported, mis-reported - or not reported at all.

To see a list on our World news page, click here . The Pulitzer Center's founder is Jon Sawyer, former Washington Bureau chief of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

facebook2.jpg

Join the folks who have already found the Beacon on Facebook, the social networking site. See the most popular stories of the day, photos, videos and upcoming events. Visit the St. Louis Beacon page on Facebook and become a fan.

twitterbutton100sq.jpg

Twitter is a "microblogging" service where users can provide short updates about what they are doing. stlbeacon is our official Twitter feed – check it out to find our featured stories and the news that matters.

mortgageicon.jpg

Mortgage foreclosures are at the heart of the current economic crisis. The Beacon and KETC/Channel 9 have been covering how mortgage problems affect St. Louis area residents.

Visit our special section to read coverage of these issues, watch Channel 9's stories and access resources to find help.

rss75.gif

What's this icon? It's the standard icon for RSS.

RSS gives you another option for reading the Beacon, in a way that may be more convenient for you. As explained below, you can use our RSS feed to get alerts about new Beacon content. The Beacon's main RSS feed is here.

For more about RSS, read this quick introduction or watch this video: RSS in simple English.