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- Path: sparky!uunet!ulowell!m2c!bu.edu!bu-bio!colby
- From: colby@bu-bio.bu.edu (Chris Colby)
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: evidence for jury rigged design
- Message-ID: <108680@bu.edu>
- Date: 28 Jan 93 22:55:22 GMT
- References: <106260@netnews.upenn.edu> <1k182mINN3d1@dmsoproto.ida.org> <106530@netnews.upenn.edu>
- Sender: news@bu.edu
- Organization: animal -- coelomate -- deuterostome
- Lines: 550
-
- This is a post that presents evidence to back up my claim that
- there is evidence of jury-rigged design in nature. The first
- part is mine, the rest is assembled from contributions of others.
- This is extremely long, but interesting (IMHO).
-
- I just sort of collected all the posts below mine and I don't
- have the others permission to post them. But, I would suspect
- they don't mind (or they wouldn't have posted it in the first
- place. In any case, I'd like to thank all the contributors to
- this almost Meritt-like gargantuan post. (Loren Petrich, Matt
- Wiener, Herb Huston and Keith (?) -- if you wrote this, write
- me so I can credit you with your example)
-
- ___________________________________________________________
- Many organisms show features of appallingly
- bad design. This is because evolution via natural selection
- cannot construct traits from scratch; new traits must be mod-
- ifications of previously existing traits. This is called
- historical constraint. A few examples of bad design imposed
- by historical constraint:
-
- In parthenogenetic lizards of the genus _Cnenidophorus_,
- only females exist. Fertility in these lizards is increased when
- another lizard engages in pseudomale behaviour and attempts to
- copulate with the first lizard. These lizards evolved from a sex-
- ual species so this behaviour makes some sense. The hormones
- for reproduction were likely originally stimulated by sexual
- behaviour. Now, although they are parthenogenetic, simulated
- sexual behaviour increases fertility. Fake sex in a partheno-
- genetic species doesn't sound like good design to me.
-
- In African locust, the nerve cells that connect to
- the wings originate in the abdomen, even though the wings are
- in the thorax. This strange "wiring" is the result of the
- abdomen nerves being co-opted for use in flight. A good
- designer would not have flight nerves travel down the ventral
- nerve cord past their target, then backtrack through the
- organism to where they are needed. Using more materials than
- necessary is not good design.
-
- In human males, the urethra passes right through the
- prostate gland, a gland very prone to infection and subsequent
- enlargement. This blocks the urethra and is a very common med-
- ical problem in males. Putting a collapsible tube through an
- organ that is very likely to expand and block flow in this
- tube is not good design. Any moron with half a brain (or less)
- could design male "plumbing" better.
-
- Perhaps one of the most famous examples of how evolution
- does not produced designed, but "jury-rigged" traits is the
- panda's thumb. If you count the digits on a panda's paw you will
- count six. Five curl around and the "thumb" is an opposable digit.
- The five fingers are made of the same bones our (humans and
- most other vertabrates) fingers are made of. The thumb is con-
- structed by enlarging a few bones that form the wrist in other
- species. The muscles that operate it are "rerouted" muscles
- present in the hand of vertabrates (see S.J. Gould book "The
- Panda's Thumb" for an engaging discussion of this case). Again,
- this is not good design.
-
- From: lip@s1.gov (Loren I. Petrich)
- Subject: Vestigial Features: Contributions for a FAQ list
-
-
- Since most of the examples that would probably be submitted
- will be animal-kingdom ones, I'd like to take a look outside.
-
- Plants:
-
- Alternation of generations:
-
- Many algae and "lower" plants, like mosses and ferns, have an
- alternation of generations between an asexual diploid phase and a
- sexual haploid phase. In ferns and similar plants, it is the diploid
- phase which is the most prominent; it reproduces by producing spores.
- The haploid plants are small ones that release egg and sperm cells;
- they need damp ground for the sperms to swim to the eggs in, thus
- limiting ferns' habitats. Looking at the "higher" plants, the
- gymnosperms and the angiosperms, we find that just about all of the
- plant is the diploid phase. The female haploid phases grow in the
- reproductive organs of the diploid phases; they are only a few cells
- in angiosperms. The male haploid phases are released as pollen; when
- they alight on the diploid phases' reproductive organs, they sprout a
- tube that attempts to find the female haploid phase. Haploid phases
- bigger than one cell are a vestigial feature here.
-
- Flowers of self-pollinators:
-
- Some flowering plants, like dandelions, are self-pollinating,
- and thus have no need of flowers to attract pollen carriers.
-
- Vestigial flower parts:
-
- Some non-flowering angiosperms, like the grasses, apparently
- have vestigial flower parts.
-
-
- Cells:
-
- Mitochondria and chloroplasts in eukaryotic cells:
-
- Eukaryotic cells (those with distinct nuclei) typically have
- rather complex internal structure. Most of this structure is generated
- from the cell's fluid matrix, but there are important exceptions.
- These are the mitochondria and the chloroplasts (as well as
- different-colored plastids). Mitochondria perform energy metabolism,
- combining electrons from food with oxygen (and hydrogen ions) to make
- water. Chloroplasts do photosynthesis. These organelles contain their
- own genes and their own DNA->RNA->protein synthesis systems. Why that
- should be necessary is not clear, given the other internal structures
- that do not need self-contained genetic systems, and also given the
- fact that many of the genes for proteins used in the mitochondria and
- chloroplasts reside in the nucleus.
-
- The answer to this riddle is that they are descended from
- free-living cells, which, of course, would need their own genetic
- systems. This is evident by comparing sequences of macromolecules like
- Cytochrome C and ribosomal RNA, as well as by comparing details of
- internal structure.
-
- The mitochondria turn out to be related to the Purple
- Bacteria, which photosynthesize by a simpler process (one photosystem
- instead of two) than oxygen-releasing photosynthesizers do, and which
- use sulfur or organic compounds instead of water as their starting
- point. The family tree of the Purple Bacteria includes many
- non-photosynthetic bacteria; these include many of the classical
- Gram-negative (from their response to a certain stain) ones like the
- root-nodule bacteria and _Escherichia coli_.
-
- The chloroplasts turn out to be descendants of the
- cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae. Chloroplast capture by eukaryotic
- cells probably happened several times, producing the different
- lineages of eukaryotic algae. In some cases, a "chloroplast" turns out
- to have once been a eukaryotic alga, indicating that this process can
- be repeated.
-
- The riddle of the mitochondrial and chloroplast proteins whose
- genes reside in the nucleus can be resolved by supposing that the
- genes were transferred there. There may have been selection pressure
- in favor of this transference if the nuclei copy genes with greater
- fidelity than the mitochondria or chloroplasts do.
-
- Thus, the genetic systems of the mitochondria and chloroplasts
- are vestigial features dating back from a free-living existence.
-
-
- Oxygen Metabolism:
-
- There is a remarkable feature of oxygen metabolism all across
- Earth organisms. In most cases, it is either the last (for
- respiration) or the first (for photosynthesis) step in the various
- metabolic pathways. Furthermore, there is more variation in the
- molecules used for the final steps of respiration than for the earlier
- ones. These circumstances suggest that O2 metabolism was a relatively
- late acquisition and that O2 respiration was made possible by some
- molecular add-ons to existing metabolic systems.
-
- This contention is supported by family trees of bacteria,
- which show that O2-users are surrounded by O2-nonusers, as if use of
- O2 was a later acquisition. Furthermore, O2-releasing photosynthesis
- used two photosystems, one of which is probably a duplicate of the
- other, as compared to the single photosystem used by non-O2-releasing
- photosynthetic bacteria.
-
- This is in agreement with geochemical evidence, which shows
- that the oxygen content of the Earth's atmosphere rose over time.
- Starting about 2 billion years ago are the Banded Iron Formations of
- deposits of Fe2O3, which is insoluble, while FeO, with less oxygen,
- is. Also, the uranium oxide UO2 is replaced by U3O8.
-
- From chemical-equilibrium considerations, one finds that the
- Earth's atmosphere would be _neutral_, consisting mostly of N2 and
- CO2. Oxygen would be removed by the oxidation of weathering rocks.
- Thus, around 2 billion years ago, something or other had started
- producing oxygen, and that was presumably the cyanobacteria.
-
- To sum up, the vestigial feature here is O2-independence by
- the bulk of the metabolic processes.
-
-
- Refs:
-
- _Bacterial Evolution_, C.R. Woese, Microbiological Reviews,
- Vol. 51, No. 2, p. 221; June 1987
-
- _Archaebacteria_, C.R. Woese, Scientific American, 1987(?)
-
- _The Phylogeny of Prokaryotes_, G.E.Fox et al. (including C.R.
- Woese), _Science_, Vol. 209, p. 4455; July 25, 1980
-
-
- /Loren
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- I know of several individual examples, one of my favorites is the
- chapter "Nasty Habits" in "The Flight of the Iguana" by David Quammen.
- He describes the bedbug Xylocaris Maculipennis and how it has adapted a
- curious way of reproduction, that of homosexual stabbing rape. Apparently
- some of the various bedbug species make use of a "mating plug" where once
- a male has mated with a female, the male "seals her shut" preventing
- other males from mating with her. Some species have adapted around
- this by stabbing rape, where the male impales the female and bypasses
- the mating plug. In Xylocaris Maculipennis, this has been taken one
- step further, where the male will impale and inseminate other males,
- and the rapist's genes enter the bloodstream to be carried to
- females by the victim. In this way, the rapist concieves by proxy.
-
- And of course there are other examples, "The Panda's Thumb" by Gould
- is one of the classics by now, and I expect you'll hear about others.
-
- Keith
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Detorted gastropods are another example of brain-dead design. Gastropods
- are famous for the 180 degree twist they do to their larval bodies, so
- that their rear ends are sticking out over their heads. So far, this is
- just weird. What is moronic (were it design) is the fact that some of
- the gastropods (the detorted ones) then do an untwist, and straighten out
- their body afterwards.
-
- Note that had Garstang been right about the reason for the twist--it's a
- survival mechanism for larvae, protecting their heads--then twisting and
- untwisting makes good design sense. But experiment shows that torsion
- makes no such difference ... it only makes for good poetry.
- --
- -Matthew P Wiener (weemba@sagi.wistar.upenn.edu)
-
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: Re: design in living organisms
-
- I've read that 1 in 3 men will need to have prostate surgery in their
- lives. Now, everyone look left.. now look right.. One of you will be
- the lucky man! Can you say endoscopy? How about razor blades?
-
- Chris, you left out the even worse design of having the testes form
- inside the abdomen, then have to pass through the abdominal wall and
- down to the scrotum, thereby leaving a weak spot (two, actually) in
- the wall. This spot, called the inguinal canal, can herniate, allowing
- the intestines to slop out under the skin. Herniation both screws up
- the intestine and cuts off/slows the blood flow to the affected testis.
- Great design.
-
- Paul Keck. I'm not a strangulated hernia, but I play one on TV.
-
-
- From: lip@s1.gov (Loren I. Petrich)
- Subject: Re: Bad design and vestigial organs
-
- In my article on vestigial features, I had promised to omit
- the animal kingdom, in the expectation that others would have
- superabundant animal-kingdom examples. That expectation only partially
- fulfilled, I will now give some animal-kingdom examples. I hope it is
- good FAQ material :-)
-
-
- The wings of flightless birds. For most flightless birds, the
- wings are non-functional, aside from possible display functions. The
- only major exceptions are diving birds, like penguins, whose "wings"
- serve as control surfaces. In some cases, the wings are _very_ small,
- as for kiwis. The effect is to reduce the number of usable limbs from
- 4 to 2, which can hardly be called an improvement.
-
- Bird-teeth genes. All the living birds, and all the known
- Cenozoic fossil birds, are toothless. Most Mesozoic birds and
- dinosaurs possessed teeth (any toothless Mesozoic birds?). A recent
- experiment in growing chicken-embryo jaw tissue next to some mouse/rat
- jaw tissue in a mouse's eye revealed that teeth formed. And the teeth
- did not look like any rodent teeth, but were peg-shaped with a conical
- top, just like the fossil bird teeth. The ability to grow teeth was
- thus preserved for over 65 million years, perhaps as a side effect of
- certain growth-control genes specifying more essential things.
-
- Extra toes of ungulates. Various hoofed mammals typically have
- toe bones in addition to those that bear the hooves. This is readily
- evident on the feet of artiodactyls (cows, deer, pigs, etc.). For
- equids, two splints are sometimes present alongside the main toe bone.
- Also, domestic horses are sometimes born with three-toed feet.
- Relatively recent fossil equids, however, often had three-toed feet,
- indicating that the one-toed feet of the extant equids is a
- development of the last couple million years, but that the animals
- still have the ability to produce three toes per foot.
-
- Solid-color equids having genes for making stripes. The living
- equids are the domestic horse, its wild progenitors, the donkeys, and
- the zebras and quaggas. Matings of different breeds of solid-color
- equids (horses and donkeys) sometimes produce offspring with
- zebra-like stripes. It is as if the genes for making stripes, which
- are expressed in zebras, are switched off in the solid-color equids,
- only to re-emerge in certain circumstances.
-
- Flies growing legs instead of antennae on their heads, and
- mosquitoes with legs for mouthparts. These "homeotic mutations"
- suggest that these appendages were originally legs, but that they were
- specialized to different functions. Removing or disabling genetic
- instructions which roughly translate into "A limb on this segment is
- to become an antenna" and "a limb on this segment is to become a
- mouthpart" leaves the limb following a default instruction that goes
- something like "a limb on this segment is to become a leg" (it's not
- even _that_ simple, because insect legs on different segments are
- often specialized differently). There is another mutation that causes
- fly larvae to start growing legs on the abdominal segments; this
- mutation is lethal, but if it was not, then an adult fly would emerge
- from the pupa with lots of extra legs down its body. The results of
- these limb-growth-control mutations are consistent with the hypothesis
- that the original arthropod had essentially identical, unspecialized
- limbs, which were specialized to different functions, or even
- suppressed, among its descendants. These limbs would have been
- specified in cookie-cutter fashion, and the various specializations
- and suppressions would have resulted from later add-ons to the growth
- instructions. Interestingly, trilobites and the Burgess Shale
- arthropods show relatively little evidence of limb
- specialization/suppression, so the earliest fossils are consistent
- with the overlaid cookie-cutter hypothesis.
-
- Crab tails. Under their broad, flattened bodies can be found
- small tails. These are clearly a leftover from when their ancestors
- had long, thin bodies, as lobsters still do.
-
- Ancestral wing configurations reappearing. Flies sometimes
- grow a second pair of wings instead of halteres (balancing organs);
- most other living insects have two pairs of wings. Cockroaches
- sometimes grow a third pair of wings, like some fossil insects.
-
- Fetal teeth missing from adults. Baleen whale fetuses have
- teeth and fetal calves have upper front teeth; adult (and probably
- newborn) baleen whales are toothless (the baleen is not teeth), and
- cows lack upper front teeth. These teeth never erupt and are resorbed
- as the fetus grows.
-
- Snakes with vestigial limbs. Boa constrictors have small
- vestigial hind legs; these may aid in copulating. However, most other
- species of snakes lack this feature, and seem to do fine without them.
-
- Cetacean hipbones. Some whales have hipbones deep inside their
- bodies, attached to no limbs. One possible purpose is to serve as an
- attachment point for muscles that move the penis, however.
-
- Mammal tails, at least in many cases. These are much reduced
- from the reptilian ancestral form, and when they serve a function, it
- is usually for whisking away flies (as for horses) or for signaling
- (consider dogs wagging their tails). New World monkeys, however, use
- them as an extra limb, and kangaroos have big tails for balancing, so
- mammal tails sometimes do have important new functions, however. There
- are some with very tiny tails, like elephants, and some which lack
- them, such as bears and apes/humans. The ancestral ape was probably
- capable of brachiating (moving around in trees suspended from tree
- limbs that one is holding), which gibbons and siamangs still do today.
- This would have made a tail a nuisance, thus leading to its
- suppression (the same thing may have happened to the ancestor of the
- frogs and toads). The disappearance (or only near-disappearance?) of
- bear tails is less easily explainable, however. But even there,
- evidence of tails is sometimes present, as in human embryos having
- tails for awhile. A side effect of a brachiating ancestry may be our
- ability to point our arms straight upward (in the direction of the
- head), an ability not as critical for our species as it is for gibbons
- and siamangs.
-
- Flounder eyes. On sea floors, there live these fish that lie
- on their sides. They have two eyes -- on one side of their heads. But
- they start off life with eyes on both sides of their heads, and one
- eye moves to the other side. Why two eyes instead of one? And why
- originally on both sides of the head?
-
- Original embryonic eye positions. In human and dog embryos, as
- in most other vertebrate embryos, the eyes are originally on the sides
- of the head. However, the eyes move forward as human and dog embryos
- grow, to make possible binocular vision. One human birth defect is for
- this process to be incomplete, making the eyes too far apart. Among
- the vast majority of the animals with backbones, the eyes are at the
- sides of the head; the main exceptions I know of are the bats, the
- primates, the carnivores, the owls, and possibly some of the more
- cerebrally endowed small carnivorous dinosaurs. In their family trees,
- they are surrounded with eyes-on-the-side animals, suggesting that
- binocular vision evolved several times.
-
- Giraffe neck lengths. Baby giraffes start out with necks whose
- relative length is similar to those of other ungulates; it is as they
- grow that they acquire the relatively long necks that the species is
- noted for.
-
- Human toes. Our feet have toes, one of which is big and
- slightly separated from the others. For walking, there is no special
- need of having a split front end of the foot; it should not be
- surprising that the toes are small. But they are there, and in most
- primate species they are much more prominent. In some species at
- least, the big toe points outward, just like a thumb. Interestingly,
- in some early hominid species, the toe bones were relatively longer
- than in our species.
-
- Wisdom teeth. Our jaws are a bit small for these late-erupting
- teeth; some people have them, while others do not.
-
- Outsized hind legs of some four-legged dinosaurs.
- _Stegosaurus_, especially, had hind legs much bigger than its front
- legs. This is probably a byproduct of being descended from a
- two-legged ancestor that went back to walking on all fours. Many of
- the dinosaurs walked on their hind limbs only, with the front limbs
- remining at various levels of development. In _Tyrannosaurus_, they
- are _very_ small, though still there, which has led to the suggestion
- that they are vestigial. The earliest dinosaurs known, like
- _Herrerasaurus_, were like this. Transitional cases? Possibly!
- _Iguanodon_ or some other such dinosaur apparently walked on two legs
- when juvenile, and on all fours when adult (and a lot heavier).
-
-
- [My memory runs out at this point...]
-
-
- Good sources for some of this material: Charles Darwin's
- _Origin of Species_ and Stephen Jay Gould's essays, notably _Hen's
- Teeth and Horse's Toes_. In addition, studies of embryonic development
- often reveal an abundance of vestigial features, some examples of
- which are given here.
-
-
- On the molecular level again....
-
- An abundace of "pseudogenes" have been discovered, which are
- not prefaced with a "start" codon, but which have a resemblance to
- known genes that is too improbable to be coincidence. These are most
- likely the results of gene duplications and mutations that turned the
- "start" codon into something else. Thus the DNA-to-RNA transcription
- system does not "know" that here is a gene to be expressed.
-
- /Loren
-
-
- From: huston@access.digex.com (Herb Huston)
- Subject: Re: design in living organisms
-
- In article <102252@bu.edu> colby@bu-bio.bu.edu (Chris Colby) writes:
- >You can find bad design everywhere in the human body (the wiring
- >of the photoreceptors in the eye and the structure of the knee
- >leap immediately to mind (perched rather precariously for such
- >a supposedly important structure)).
-
- It can hardly be said that the human knee is well designed for kneeling.
- Prolonged kneeling can lead to an expansion of the bursa in front of the
- patella, a condition known as housemaid's knee. (Perhaps that's why house-
- maids are almost extinct.)
-
- Likewise, there's a design flaw in the human elbow. At the knob on the
- lower end of the humerus the ulnar nerve is exposed just under the skin.
- A sharp blow by a hard object causes that numbing, painful sensation called
- "striking the funny bone" (a pun on the name of the bone).
-
- There are some additional design flaws that appear in the manufacturing
- process of humans: the fetal lanugo, the grasping reflex, the Moro reflex,
- and the fontanelles. Even the adult human skull is too thin to provide
- adequate protection to the gigantic brain and the absence of brow ridges
- leaves the eyes poorly protected.
-
- When can we expect issuance of the recall notice?
-
- -- Herb Huston
- -- huston@access.digex.com
-
-
- From: lip@s1.gov (Loren I. Petrich)
- Subject: More vestiginal features...
-
- Fused bones. These are bones that start out separate and
- become knitted together for added strength. Human examples are the
- skull and the pelvis; birds have several bones in their front limbs
- (wings) fused.
-
- Bird alula or "bastard wing". A much-reduced digit on the
- front limb. The two others are retained, though they are fused into
- one piece.
-
- The Hoatzin chick's claws. The claws on their wing limbs
- enable them to climb away from potential predators; their presence
- indicates that all the clawless-winged birds have the potential of
- growing claws on their wing limbs, which is inherited from their
- clawed-limbed land ancestors, which were probably small theropod
- (carnivorous) dinosaurs.
-
- Hollowness of dodo and penguin bones. It is not critical for
- ground birds to reduce weight with hollow bones of the sort that
- flying birds have.
-
- Animals which make teeth as fetuses, then resorb them: Baleen
- whales, anteaters, and some ungulates (cows have upper front teeth
- which they later resorb).
-
- Gill bars of tetrapod (land-vertebrate and descendant)
- embryos. The cartilage gill bars appear, only to disappear or be
- reworked with later growth. Of these animals, only amphibians have
- gills, and that only in the larval (tadpole) stage. Most adult
- amphibians and all the rest are air breathers; even the aquatic ones
- do not grow gills to use underwater.
-
- Aquatic-tetrapod air breathing and land breeding. Largely
- aquatic animals like sea turtles, Galapagos iguanas, sea snakes,
- crocodilians, water birds including penguins, phocids (seals, sea
- lions, and walruses), and cetaceans (dolphins and whales) all have to
- come up to the surface to breathe; all of them but the sea snakes and
- the cetaceans lay eggs or give birth on the land. Though the sea
- snakes and cetaceans are completely aquatic, giving birth in the
- water, they still have to breathe air, which is a limitation for a
- completely aquatic animal.
-
- Jaw origins from gill bars. In jawed-vertebrate embryos, the
- jaws are formed from the gill bars closest to the mouth. In jawless
- fish (lampreys and hagfish), these gill bars stay gill bars. This
- circumstance indicates an origin of jaws from gill bars.
-
- The mammalian amniotic sac. This is a vestigial eggshell that
- surrounds the fetus. Live birth evolved out of retaining an egg
- inside.
-
- Tadpoles. Immature frogs go through this phase, in which they
- look and act much like fish.
-
- The aquatic embryos of land salamanders, which live on the
- land from hatching.
-
- Tails of human embryos. Though tails are a nearly universal
- vertebrate feature, and are present in all the embryos, they are lost
- in later growth in our species and the most closely related ones (the
- apes), leaving only a tiny bone on the pelvis, the coccyx.
-
- Rudimentary legs of some snakes (boas, etc.). Other species of
- snakes seem to do fine without them.
-
- The small lung of snakes with only one lung significantly
- large. It is an inheritance from two-lunged ancestors.
-
- Small wings of flightless female moths in certain species. In
- most other species, as with winged insects in general, both sexes, and
- not only the male, have functional wings.
-
- Stumpy tails and other such features of some domestic animals
- bred to have none.
-
- Nonfunctional pistils in male flowers. Since the predominant
- configuration of flowers is to have both sexes of reproductive organs
- (stamens and pistils), the pistil of a flower with only stamens
- functional is vestigial.
-
- Certain plants [Serophulariaceae (Darwin's Origin of Species)]
- have reduced stamens.
-
- /Loren Petrich, the Master Blaster
- /lip@s1.gov
-
- Chris Colby --- email: colby@bu-bio.bu.edu ---
- "'My boy,' he said, 'you are descended from a long line of determined,
- resourceful, microscopic tadpoles--champions every one.'"
- --Kurt Vonnegut from "Galapagos"
-