mark kennedy said:I wanted to save this one for last. The mechanism is a fixed mutation in populations leading to the rise of a distictly different genus like humans.
Now you are confounding different levels of mechanism. The mechanism which changes a genome is mutation. Then there are mechanisms which cause mutations in the first place. A fixed mutation is a change in the genome which affects all or nearly all members of the species. But you also have to keep in mind the mechanisms which bring about fixation.
No one fixed mutation will ordinarily lead to speciation, much less give rise to a new genus. Not only do you need many mutations and many fixations, you also need a mechanism to divide the population into isolated groups.
So you can't pin anything down to one mechanism. You need to look at a variety of mechanisms of different kinds at different points in the process.
There is definately a process that must involve things changing at a nucleotide level, an amino acid sequence level, a protein level
Yes, and further at a morphological level and a gene pool level as well.
and none of these changes without signifigant, if not grave, risks.
And where are the significant, if not grave, risks felt? You have not demonstrated yet that the population is at risk.
Ok, so we are going to abandon the steps required for mutations to result in adaptive evolution and get right to the effects when expressed in the phenotype. That is begging the question a little is it not? Sure, it will be preserved if it gets to the point where there is a signifigant advantage but getting from point A to point B, C and D has many pitfalls and trappings that we can't ignore.
Don't be silly. I was not talking about abandoning any steps at all. I was talking about identifying the point at which one can speak of benefit.
If A is a change in an DNA sequence and B is a resulting change in an amino acid sequence, and C is a resulting change in a protein and D is a change in expressed morphology due to the change in the protein, when, in this sequence can we speak of a beneficial change? We can have no idea whether a change is beneficial, neutral or harmful until we get to D. And even then we need a measure of differential reproductive success to tell us whether it is beneficial. We can't tell just by looking at the change.
So to say that A (the mutation) is "beneficial" is really a retrospective judgment. We can't tell from A (or B or C) that the change is beneficial. All we can say is that we have evidence in the form of differential reproductive success that D is beneficial. If we can then identify A as the cause (via B and C) of D, we can identify A as beneficial.
We can look at the intensity of the overall effects of mutations by comparing a single base substitution to an indel, that much is certain.
And that too may vary. An indel affecting 100 base pairs may have a less intense overall effect than a single base substitution. We can't simply count base pairs to determine intensity of effect.
We know what happens most of the time when they are expressed in the phenotype, that is even clearer still. What is even more important, we know the limits of this kind of change in positivly benefiting populations by looking at their rare occurance in nature. A slight selective advantage for a small minority for a short time, couldn't be any clearer if you were looking at it under a microscope.
Again, you have to factor in environmental conditions. A short term change in annual rainfall levels that reverts to normal will give you the fluctuating changes in the beak of Galapagos finches. But a long-term climate change stretching over hundreds of thousands of years---like the Pleistocene ice age--will lead to long-term changes in a single direction. Similarly a permanent change in ecological niche--like moving from terrestrial habitat to marine habitat fosters permanent changes.
Funny you should mention that, it is the effect of the environment that I am most interested in. I won't go into the particulars right now but that is what I am browsing on the internet when I'm not talking to you guys.
Well keep it up. It may finally help develop some comprehension of natural selection.
Mutations is not a perfectly good word since a mutations are transcript errors
No, mutations are not transcript errors. Mutations are changes in DNA sequences. Copying error is a common mechanism which creates these changes. You are confusing the mechanism (copy error) with the result (mutation).
I am not on here trying to convince anyone of anything, I am trying to get to the part where we explore these mechanisms but it takes a lot of time.
You are right. It takes time because evolution is a complex process involving many mechanisms at many levels---some in the cell, some in individual organisms, some in populations. You have been fixated for some time on the first two. Changing focus to environmental factors may help you with the third.
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