J
Jet Black
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no many of them are not Christians becaue they oftern teach the opposite to what the BIBLE teaches us.
ok, let me put this challenge to you: Are Lucaspa and sfs Christians?
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no many of them are not Christians becaue they oftern teach the opposite to what the BIBLE teaches us.
Aron-Ra how can you say Christians are bias when you say that you are bias.
and the evolutionist are bias because they try tell people that micro-evolution is true, as I have no question with that as people see it happen, but then the evolutionist says that because that is true then macro-evolution must be true as well.
Which I dont agree with as no person has ever seen or experienced.
You two seem to be talking past each other. Genetic drift does not create two populations out of one. But if geographical isolation creates two populations, then genetic drift will eventually cause reproductive isolation as well, and two species will result. The process is likely to be much slower than if selection is involved, however.No. Genetic drift acts within a population. It does not split a population.
No, that's not right. Strictly speaking, Hardy-Weinberg is only accurate for infinite population sizes; for any finite population, genetic drift will be a factor. Even in infinite populations, genetic drift causes most new beneficial alleles to disappear from the population. For most realistic population sizes, genetic drift also causes new neutral mutations to fix. One of the most basic results of population genetics, in fact, is that the rate of fixation of neutral alleles is independent of population size (assuming a constant-sized population at equilibrium). For example, the great bulk of mutations that have accumulated between humans and chimpanzees (a subject that often comes up here) are almost certainly selectively neutral.But mutations don't "accrue" unless there is selection. Remember Hardy-Weinberg. Gene frequencies stay the same from generation to generation unless there is some other process acting. The equations for genetic drift shows that it is not a factor when the effective population size >50.
If you can explain to me what the barrier is between microevolution and macroevolution, apart from time which there is plenty of, I'd like to see it.Aron-Ra how can you say Christians are bias when you say that you are bias.
and the evolutionist are bias because they try tell people that micro-evolution is true, as I have no question with that as people see it happen, but then the evolutionist says that because that is true then macro-evolution must be true as well.
Which I dont agree with as no person has ever seen or experienced.
Then the question is; do you worship God? Or do you worship a book men wrote about God?no many of them are not Christians becaue they oftern teach the opposite to what the BIBLE teaches us.
But I did not say I was biased. In fact, I said I was not biased.Aron-Ra how can you say Christians are bias when you say that you are bias.
Macroevolution has in fact been directly-observed and documented dozens of times, both in the lab and in naturally-controlled conditions in the field. I can provide documentation for many of these occuracnces if you wish.and the evolutionist are bias because they try tell people that micro-evolution is true, as I have no question with that as people see it happen, but then the evolutionist says that because that is true then macro-evolution must be true as well.
Which I dont agree with as no person has ever seen or experienced.
What does swarm theory have to do with evolution? Obviously group behavior evolved, but other than that, what is your point?yes but you must remember that national geographic is a bias magazine and that they are evolutionists
Yes, that was my point. Thanks for making it more clear.You two seem to be talking past each other. Genetic drift does not create two populations out of one. But if geographical isolation creates two populations, then genetic drift will eventually cause reproductive isolation as well, and two species will result. The process is likely to be much slower than if selection is involved, however.
no many of them are not Christians becaue they oftern teach the opposite to what the BIBLE teaches us.
and the evolutionist are bias because they try tell people that micro-evolution is true, as I have no question with that as people see it happen, but then the evolutionist says that because that is true then macro-evolution must be true as well.
Which I dont agree with as no person has ever seen or experienced.
You two seem to be talking past each other. Genetic drift does not create two populations out of one. But if geographical isolation creates two populations, then genetic drift will eventually cause reproductive isolation as well, and two species will result.
My point was that you were ignoring genetic drift, which is the dominant contributor to evolution in many situations.
Perhaps my difficulties arise from picturing genes as individuals.
The HWE is based on the assumption that alleles are inherited independtly of each other which isn't true for every allele. Also, HWE is violated for small founding populations which can be involved in allopatric speciation (eg founding populations on islands).
I guess what I was going for is the causation of divergence. With sympatric speciation it is strongly influenced by genetics. This is what gets the ball rolling. For example, the case of the apple maggot where speciation occurs by adapting to different hosts and hence different breeding periods. The two step process is adaptation then isolation. I view allopatric speciation as the opposite trend, isolation followed by adaptation.
Ecosystems are the product of evolution.
I never meant that the Modern Synthesis is more restrictive.
No, that's not right. Strictly speaking, Hardy-Weinberg is only accurate for infinite population sizes; for any finite population, genetic drift will be a factor.
Even in infinite populations, genetic drift causes most new beneficial alleles to disappear from the population.
One of the most basic results of population genetics, in fact, is that the rate of fixation of neutral alleles is independent of population size (assuming a constant-sized population at equilibrium).
The probability that any new neutral allele will fix is indeed 1/2N, and becomes very small for modest sized populations. The total number of neutral alleles that fix, however, does not decrease as the population size increases, because the number of mutations that occur also increase linearly with the population. In a diploid population, the total number of mutations is 2Nu, where u is the mutation rate per generation per genome copy. The probability that each fixes is 1/2N, so the mean number of neutral alleles fixing by drift is u per generation, regardless of population size. For mammals, u is on the order of tens of mutations per generation -- so that's how many neutral alleles fix by drift.Not "eventually". The probability that genetic drift will "fix" an allele (or eliminate it) are actually quite low.
Mathematics. Futuyma page 393
Kimura and then Li and Gauer derived the probability of an allele being fixed in the population. The probability of fixation of an allele A2 where the fitness of the genotypes are: A1A1 = 1, A1A2 = 1 +s, and A2A2 = 1 +2s is:
P = 1 - e^2Nsq/1 - e^-4Nq where e = the base of natural logarithms = 2.718, N = effective population size, s = selection coefficient, and q = the initial frequency of the allele in the population. For a mutation, q = 1/2N
Where s = 0 (genetic drift) then the equation reduces to P = 1/2N. At N =50, you are already down to P = 0.01.
That's for one allele. For speciation, you need several allelic changes to get a new species. So start multiplying the probabilities and you quickly get to the level that it is VERY unlikely that genetic drift is going to cause speciation.
so the mean number of neutral alleles fixing by drift is u per generation, regardless of population size. For mammals, u is on the order of tens of mutations per generation -- so that's how many neutral alleles fix by drift.
Of course, very few of those neutral alleles will cause incompatability with other populations, which is why I said the process is likely to be slow.
The probability of an allele being fixed is obviously higher for a beneficial allele than for a neutral one. Beneficial alleles are much, much rarer than neutral ones, however, so the contribution of genetic drift to fixation is still much larger than that of positive selection. In humans, the total number of nonfunctional fixed differences with chimpanzees is several orders of magnitude larger than the number of functional differences.Let's take the same N = 1,000 and the selective advantage is small at s = 0.01 and A2 is a mutation so that its initial frequency is 1/2000, then P = 0.02. Compare that to P = 0.0005 for genetic drift. Which is more significant?
Where N is large (>100) and s is positive, then P = 2s. From this, the probability for fixation by selection becomes independent of population size.
So let's take our same s = 0.01 and N = 10,000. P is still 0.02. However, P from genetic drift is 0.00005.
Most s observed in nature range from 0.1 - 0.8.
Sure, neutral mutations can do that. Take a species that uses pheromones for mate recognition. Population A fixes a neutral variant that changes the olfactory receptor used to detect the pheromone. The new OR is just as sensitive (or even more sensitive) to the standard type of pheromone, but has greater selectivity: it doesn't bind closely related molecules as well. Population B fixes a neutral mutation in the pheromone. The ancestral OR receptor binds the new pheromone just fine, but the mutated OR in population B has trouble recognizing it.If the allele is neutral, it won't cause incompatibility, will it? Because it won't really change the phenotype. What you would need is a mutation that causes sexual incompatibility.
I haven't seen a published estimate that low in that last ten years. Typical estimates are in the range of 30 to 60 per genome.Mutation rates are usually very low. Humans have one of the highest at an estimated rate of 10-20 mutations per genome.
Yes. And every generation fixes a new lot of alleles. Using your numbers, in 80,000 years 80,000 alleles will have fixed in that population. In another population, 80,000 alleles, many of them different, will also have fixed. In half a million years (roughly the time since the Neandertal line diverged from our line), there would be something like a million fixed differences. Is that enough to cause speciation? I don't know, but it's not obviously nuts.E. coli is about 0.0001 per genome and Drosophila is 1 per genome, if I remember correctly.
You also need to consider the time it takes for any given mutation to be fixed by genetic drift. That definitely does depend on population size.
It turns out that the time is 4N generations. So, with a population size of 1,000 that would be 4,000 generations. With human generation time of 20 years, that would be 80,000 years!
Yes. Fixation by drift is not currently an issue for humans.With our current population of 6 billion, the time for an allele to be fixed by genetic drift is going to be 480 billion years!
I agree. That's why I wrote, "The process is likely to be much slower than if selection is involved, however." Speciation driven by selection is probably the norm.Drosophila would fare better, with 4,000 weeks, or 80 years to be fixed. Since natural selection produced new species of Drosophila in 250 generations, genetic drift is still pretty insignificant.
I submit it is a confusion between "selection OF" and "selection FOR". It is selection OF the individual, but selection FOR the allele.![]()
Even in your example of sympatric speciation, isolation comes FIRST. Genetics comes later. First the population is isolated on its new host, then that new host is a new environment and natural selection works adapting the population.
What I said was that people tend to try to make the Modern Synthesis more restrictive than it actually is. They tend to say that the MS does not include evo-devo when it really does.
no many of them are not Christians becaue they oftern teach the opposite to what the BIBLE teaches us.
and the evolutionist are bias because they try tell people that micro-evolution is true, as I have no question with that as people see it happen, but then the evolutionist says that because that is true then macro-evolution must be true as well.
ja exept that macro-evolution has never been seen and never will be by a human so how does one know that it can happen.
if you dont believe in Genesis or parts of it as it does clearly teach that the earth was created in 6 days. then what other parts of the Bible dont you "have" to believe?