Intro to Evolution ppt
... Organisms better suited to the environment are more likely to survive & reproduce than organisms less suited to the environment. ...
... Organisms better suited to the environment are more likely to survive & reproduce than organisms less suited to the environment. ...
Evolution Quiz Week 3
... 1) Which is not one of the 4 steps in evolution by natural selection? a. Variation among individuals b. Different survival/reproduction between individuals c. Change in genetic composition of population d. Adapting organisms to a future environment e. Evolution 2) What is relative fitness? a. The nu ...
... 1) Which is not one of the 4 steps in evolution by natural selection? a. Variation among individuals b. Different survival/reproduction between individuals c. Change in genetic composition of population d. Adapting organisms to a future environment e. Evolution 2) What is relative fitness? a. The nu ...
Group selection
Group selection is a proposed mechanism of evolution in which natural selection is imagined to act at the level of the group, instead of at the more conventional level of the individual.Early authors such as V. C. Wynne-Edwards and Konrad Lorenz argued that the behavior of animals could affect their survival and reproduction as groups.From the mid 1960s, evolutionary biologists such as John Maynard Smith argued that natural selection acted primarily at the level of the individual. They argued on the basis of mathematical models that individuals would not altruistically sacrifice fitness for the sake of a group. They persuaded the majority of biologists that group selection did not occur, other than in special situations such as the haplodiploid social insects like honeybees (in the Hymenoptera), where kin selection was possible.In 1994 David Sloan Wilson and Elliott Sober argued for multi-level selection, including group selection, on the grounds that groups, like individuals, could compete. In 2010 three authors including E. O. Wilson, known for his work on ants, again revisited the arguments for group selection, provoking a strong rebuttal from a large group of evolutionary biologists. As of yet, there is no clear consensus among biologists regarding the importance of group selection.