As far as I understand, various abilities like flying, sight, hearing etc. were
ID: 30633 • Letter: A
Question
As far as I understand, various abilities like flying, sight, hearing etc. were caused by slow evolution, where those with a greater ability to to these things had better chance of survival. (If this assumption is wrong, then I am happy to delete this question).
Are there, however, any documented examples of by evolutionary leaps being made, over the course of just a few generations? I understand, that some abilities have a tipping point where one gets the ability suddenly, but there is not a lot of physiological change made. An example of this would be the ability to climb a tree, which could suddenly be possible if the body weight is reduced with just a few percent. What my question is about, are sudden changes to the characteristics of a creature.
Explanation / Answer
Zuk et al. (2006) document the rapid evolution of song-less crickets in a population of crickets that previously used song for courtship.
In less that 20 generations, over 90% of male crickets of the species Teleogryllus oceanicus evolved to a novel morphology ("flatwing") that rendered them unable to call to females. They hypothesize that this shift resulted from the presence of an North American invasive "acoustically orienting parasitoid fly."
Basically the flies detect calling males and parasitize them, rendering them unable to reproduce. Were it not for the presence of the parasitoid fly, the flatwing flies would likely not have survived. Non-calling individuals rely on the presence of calling males to bring females near for mating.
Related Questions
Navigate
Integrity-first tutoring: explanations and feedback only — we do not complete graded work. Learn more.