It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
June 26, 2007
Humans Have Spread Globally, and Evolved Locally
By NICHOLAS WADE
[...]
A notable instance of recent natural selection is the emergence of lactose tolerance — the ability to digest lactose in adulthood — among the cattle-herding people of northern Europe some 5,000 years ago. Lactase, the enzyme that digests the principal sugar of milk, is usually switched off after weaning. But because of the great nutritional benefit for cattle herders of being able to digest lactose in adulthood, a genetic change that keeps the lactase gene switched on spread through the population.
Lactose tolerance is not confined to Europeans. Last year, Sarah Tishkoff of the University of Maryland and colleagues tested 43 ethnic groups in East Africa and found three separate mutations, all different from the European one, that keep the lactase gene switched on in adulthood. One of the mutations, found in peoples of Kenya and Tanzania, may have arisen as recently as 3,000 years ago.
That lactose tolerance has evolved independently four times is an instance of convergent evolution. Natural selection has used the different mutations available in European and East African populations to make each develop lactose tolerance. In Africa, those who carried the mutation were able to leave 10 times more progeny, creating a strong selective advantage.
Researchers studying other single genes have found evidence for recent evolutionary change in the genes that mediate conditions like skin color, resistance to malaria and salt retention.
[..]
Originally posted by Marduk
thats very interesting
because it totally disproves any claim that an invisible man in the sky made us in his own image
Originally posted by Heronumber0
Sorry, no it doesn't. It is hard to deny evolution once you look into it in enough detail. However, the rules/laws can be set then allowed to proceed from the initial conditions.
Do these peopple survive more easily and are then able to pass on their genes or are mutations on a survival spectrum from neutral mutation to lethal mutation?
The ability to digest lactose into adulthood at the time and still is a gigantic survival bonus.
Originally posted by Heronumber0
Originally posted by Marduk
thats very interesting
because it totally disproves any claim that an invisible man in the sky made us in his own image
Sorry, no it doesn't. It is hard to deny evolution once you look into it in enough detail. However, the rules/laws can be set then allowed to proceed from the initial conditions. The thing that puzzles me is the selective advantage conferred by these constitutive lactase mutations. Do these peopple survive more easily and are then able to pass on their genes or are mutations on a survival spectrum from neutral mutation to lethal mutation?
Originally posted by Heronumber0
I have to disagree Darkside. There is not a survival advantage in environments where there is a varied diet. However, there is local genetic variation from meiotic events that generate gametes (sperm and egg). However, it would be intriguing if some of the lactase genes are made by transposition or from the 'switching on' of previously silent genes.
It is. An individual that can digest lactose as an adult is more likely to survive than an individual that can't. Especially in a world without Tesco's and McDonald's and where your dependant on migrating herds.
Originally posted by Heronumber0
I beg to differ again. You and I could easily survive on vegetables which do not have lactose. C'mon DS it is about survival of the fittest dude...And this scenario does not cut it.
About nowadays, I'm not sure survival of the fittest applies at all unless we're put in conditions of extreme poverty or isolation.