Ecolog: 

Pryde is right on. But the reality is that evolution is misunderstood by a lot 
of people, and clarity on this subject would go a long way toward resolving 
some of the conflict arising therefrom. That will require clear statements from 
evolutionary biologists for starters, and perhaps a lot of article-writing and 
TV production that not only is more careful about the semantics used,* but 
actually getting the ball rolling toward rolling back the misconceptions. 

But first, you catch the rabbit--and even make the stew. Then serve it until it 
is found delicious. (As long as it's not bushmeat.) That is, get this matter 
thoroughly discussed by evolutionary biologists and others who understand the 
merits and deficiencies of the two "sides," then "make it news." 

WT

*advancement, progress . . .
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Liz Pryde 
  To: Wayne Tyson 
  Cc: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, December 05, 2012 9:00 PM
  Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Discussion Panel Topic Suggestions


  In Darwin's "Origin" the theory was one of adaptation, not advancement.
  Unfortunately Spencer coined the "fittest" remark and that was a popular mode 
of thinking at the time - when people were rather self-congratulatory about 
their scientific understandings of the natural world (how clever!).
  So, evolution was originally meant as an adaptation to the chance 
environment. It may or may not have been 'better' than the previous model, but 
it survived through chance, and we assume, advantage. This doesn't necessarily 
make it advantageous throughout time.


  I'm sure we can all come up with improvements to the human body ;). 
  Liz






  On 06/12/2012, at 2:47 PM, Wayne Tyson <[email protected]> wrote:


    Joey and Ecolog

    I am the author of question 3, and the point is exactly the one made by 
Smokey, with which I fully agree. There do seem to be people who seem to be of 
the opinion that evolution IS progress, however. I posted this question to a 
well-known evolutionary biology forum and Richard Dawkins replied in the 
affirmative; when I asked for further clarification, there was no response 
(except one which agreed with my point; several others were outraged, and I 
ended up having to issue an "apology." David Attenborough, in one of his 
excellent TV programs used the term "advance," in discussing the matter with 
one of the world's top paleontologists, whom I emailed the raw question; he 
responded in the affirmative, that the creatures he was most famous for 
studying did "advance." When I responded by asking if he would then conclude 
that the genus Homo would then be an example of "evolutionary advance," the 
correspondence was terminated.

    My straw polling amongst "the public" tilts strongly in favor of "progress" 
or "advancement" with time, and while I'm not sure of all the sources that have 
contributed to this impression, the Time-Life book "Human Evolution," with its 
famous/infamous "March of Progress" illustration beginning with a quadruped ape 
and ending with an upright, apparently Aryan male. I know of no studies that 
have been done on this issue, and attempting to raise the discussion on 
respected websites causes more blowback than the kind of clarity that Smokey's 
concise statement brings to the discussion.

    Ecolog is a respected and large listserv. Will there be further comments, 
either in support or in refutation of Smokey's explanation, or is this subject 
one of those academic "third rails" that no one dare touch? Those who fear 
posting their comments here could send Smokey and me their comments directly if 
they want to avoid reprisals (the subject of reprisals for posts reared its 
ugly head several months ago, and believe it or not, the emails I received were 
not limited to students; I got several from professors).

    On the other hand, if this subject is considered unimportant, "proper" 
actions can be taken, eh?

    WT

    ----- Original Message ----- From: "Joey Smokey" 
<[email protected]>
    To: <[email protected]>
    Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2012 1:51 PM
    Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Discussion Panel Topic Suggestions



      Jason,

      I strongly advise against the third question. Evolution is not 
directional,
      and the question is worded to suggest that it is. If the point of the
      question is to dispel the idea of evolution being directional, then it
      would be fine.

      There are many common misconceptions of organisms "progressing" through
      evolution. The most common is the typical classroom image of human
      evolution moving from ape-like toward human-like over time. Transition
      species in the fossil record do not suggest a progressive change from one
      type of body form into another. The transition to terrestrial life is the
      same way; transition species such as Tiktaalik, Eusthenopteron, and
      Ichthyostega did not "march along" until they were well-adapted for life 
on
      land. Evolution does not craft "improved" species or "advanced" species. 
It
      simply results in organisms being well-adapted for their environment at a
      given time.

      In regards to the fourth question, ecological time refers to immediate
      interactions between organisms and their environment. It does lead into
      evolutionary time and the change in allelic frequencies through
      generations. So, ecological interactions can and do have meaningful impact
      on evolutionary trajectories of species.

      I think the first two questions will lead into some good discussion.

      Best of luck on your discussion panel,

      Joey Smokey
      WSU Vancouver


      On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 8:37 AM, jason.strickland <
      [email protected]> wrote:


        Dear group,

        I have compiled some of the ideas that were given to me about my
        discussion panel. The response was much lower than I expected so if you
        have any ideas, feel free to share those as well. Thank you to all those
        that contributed.


        1.       Will most organisms be capable of adapting quickly enough to
        respond to climate change/sea level rise to be evolutionarily relevant?

        2.       What impact will Genetically Modified Organisms have on the
        ecology and evolution of the modified species and other species?

        3.       Do organisms progress/improve/advance through evolution?

        4.       Do ecological processes/interactions last long enough to have 
any
        meaningful impact on the evolutionary trajectory of a species?

        Please share your thoughts on these topics or suggest others.

        Cheers,
        Jason Strickland
        [email protected]

        From: jason.strickland
        Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2012 3:59 PM
        To: [email protected]
        Subject: Discussion Panel Topic Suggestions

        Dear group,

        I am currently working on forming a discussion panel that will include 
two
        ecologists and two evolutionary biologists to discuss topics that 
involve
        merging ecology and evolution. The discussion will be in front of 
150-200
        students ranging from undergraduates to post-docs (all in biology). The
        panel will happen on a Saturday morning so it needs to be an exciting
        discussion to hold the audience's interest and cause them to ask 
questions.

        I am looking for topics/questions that the two fields do not completely
        agree on. The goal is to have the panel disagree on topics to allow the
        students to learn and be entertained. If anyone can suggest topics or
        questions that ecologists and evolutionary biologists have different
        viewpoints on, they would be greatly appreciated. I have a few topics
        already, but wanted to ask a larger audience to suggest topics to 
determine
        if there are certain topics/questions that come up frequently. Feel 
free to
        email me directly ([email protected]<mailto:
        [email protected]>) or respond to this post with your
        suggestions.

        Thank you in advance for your help,

        Jason Strickland
        
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>




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  Liz Pryde
  PhD Candidate (off-campus @ The University of Melbourne)
  School of Earth and Environmental Sciences
  James Cook University, QLD

  [email protected]
  [email protected]





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