登陆注册
4707200000041

第41章

By HUGO DE VRIES, Professor of Botany in the University of Amsterdam.

I. DIFFERENT KINDS OF VARIABILITY.

Before Darwin, little was known concerning the phenomena of variability.

The fact, that hardly two leaves on a tree were exactly the same, could not escape observation: small deviations of the same kind were met with everywhere, among individuals as well as among the organs of the same plant. Larger aberrations, spoken of as monstrosities, were for a long time regarded as lying outside the range of ordinary phenomena. A special branch of inquiry, that of Teratology, was devoted to them, but it constituted a science by itself, sometimes connected with morphology, but having scarcely any bearing on the processes of evolution and heredity.

Darwin was the first to take a broad survey of the whole range of variations in the animal and vegetable kingdoms. His theory of Natural Selection is based on the fact of variability. In order that this foundation should be as strong as possible he collected all the facts, scattered in the literature of his time, and tried to arrange them in a scientific way. He succeeded in showing that variations may be grouped along a line of almost continuous gradations, beginning with simple differences in size and ending with monstrosities. He was struck by the fact that, as a rule, the smaller the deviations, the more frequently they appear, very abrupt breaks in characters being of rare occurrence.

Among these numerous degrees of variability Darwin was always on the look out for those which might, with the greatest probability, be considered as affording material for natural selection to act upon in the development of new species. Neither of the extremes complied with his conceptions. He often pointed out, that there are a good many small fluctuations, which in this respect must be absolutely useless. On the other hand, he strongly combated the belief, that great changes would be necessary to explain the origin of species. Some authors had propounded the idea that highly adapted organs, e.g. the wings of a bird, could not have been developed in any other way than by a comparatively sudden modification of a well defined and important kind. Such a conception would allow of great breaks or discontinuity in the evolution of highly differentiated animals and plants, shortening the time for the evolution of the whole organic kingdom and getting over numerous difficulties inherent in the theory of slow and gradual progress. It would, moreover, account for the genetic relation of the larger groups of both animals and plants. It would, in a word, undoubtedly afford an easy means of simplifying the problem of descent with modification.

Darwin, however, considered such hypotheses as hardly belonging to the domain of science; they belong, he said, to the realm of miracles. That species have a capacity for change is admitted by all evolutionists; but there is no need to invoke modifications other than those represented by ordinary variability. It is well known that in artificial selection this tendency to vary has given rise to numerous distinct races, and there is no reason for denying that it can do the same in nature, by the aid of natural selection. On both lines an advance may be expected with equal probability.

His main argument, however, is that the most striking and most highly adapted modifications may be acquired by successive variations. Each of these may be slight, and they may affect different organs, gradually adapting them to the same purpose. The direction of the adaptations will be determined by the needs in the struggle for life, and natural selection will simply exclude all such changes as occur on opposite or deviating lines. In this way, it is not variability itself which is called upon to explain beautiful adaptations, but it is quite sufficient to suppose that natural selection has operated during long periods in the same way.

Eventually, all the acquired characters, being transmitted together, would appear to us, as if they had all been simultaneously developed.

Correlations must play a large part in such special evolutions: when one part is modified, so will be other parts. The distribution of nourishment will come in as one of the causes, the reactions of different organs to the same external influences as another. But no doubt the more effective cause is that of the internal correlations, which, however, are still but dimly understood. Darwin repeatedly laid great stress on this view, although a definite proof of its correctness could not be given in his time. Such proof requires the direct observation of a mutation, and it should be stated here that even the first observations made in this direction have clearly confirmed Darwin's ideas. The new evening primroses which have sprung in my garden from the old form of Oenothera Lamarckiana, and which have evidently been derived from it, in each case, by a single mutation, do not differ from their parent species in one character only, but in almost all their organs and qualities. Oenothera gigas, for example, has stouter stems and denser foliage; the leaves are larger and broader; its thick flower-buds produce gigantic flowers, but only small fruits with large seeds. Correlative changes of this kind are seen in all my new forms, and they lend support to the view that in the gradual development of highly adapted structures, analogous correlations may have played a large part.

They easily explain large deviations from an original type, without requiring the assumption of too many steps.

同类推荐
  • 杂譬喻经

    杂譬喻经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 昭觉丈雪醉禅师语录

    昭觉丈雪醉禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编宫闱典妃嫔部

    明伦汇编宫闱典妃嫔部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 一字佛顶轮王念诵仪轨

    一字佛顶轮王念诵仪轨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • BENITO CERENO

    BENITO CERENO

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 赤松子章历

    赤松子章历

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 舌尖上的心跳

    舌尖上的心跳

    食物的用途——女主:填饱肚子。男主:艺术。对对方的感觉——女主:变态。男主:太蠢。有没有可能和对方谈恋爱——女主:谁,谁想和变态在一起啊!男主:这么蠢,也就我能接受了。这就是个高冷男神PK掉女主的腹黑青梅竹马,带着女主称霸美食界的故事。
  • 利州北佛龛前重于去

    利州北佛龛前重于去

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 告诉我该如何爱你

    告诉我该如何爱你

    本书收录了青年作家多多的经典短篇小说。繁忙的都市生活,封闭独立的自我,时常让我们忘记了如何表达爱,向爱的人倾诉内心的情感。作者借助文字,通过不同人的视角去讲述发生在都市生活中你、我、他的爱情故事。
  • 女配来袭:恶魔王爷请接招

    女配来袭:恶魔王爷请接招

    闺蜜给夏晓雨看了一本,超时空宇宙霹雳无敌无聊的小说,刚吐槽完这本书有多菜,结果竟然穿越到了这本小说里!这比喝了假酒更让人难受好吧!虽然穿越到女配身上,而且还是必死的那种女配,但是夏晓雨可不认命!女主是什么?能吃吗?不就是嫁给了一个恶魔王爷吗,她还就不信了,以她看了这么多电视剧的经验,撩一个古代人还是搓搓有余的...撩不动就追,追不到就破坏,实在破坏不了男女主的感情,那她只好溜了。只是奇怪了,为什么她都认输退出了,男主还是对她穷追不舍,难道非杀她不可嘛?
  • 顾盼生辉

    顾盼生辉

    晋江人气作者夜蔓首部温暖之作,治愈每一段抱憾人生的手语之爱。因为遇见你,我才喜欢上雪天;也是因为遇见你,我才知道原来生活还有另一种可能。开间工作室,还有一家咖啡厅,里面放着翻不完的漫画书;养一只波斯猫,一个人的时候也不会觉得孤独。她想就这样过一辈子也挺好,如果陈绍宸没有出现的话……她一直记得那天,雪花纷飞,彻骨寒冷,他说:“你比画,我应该能看得懂。”从遇见她的那一刻起,他便以自己的方式守护她成长。宸,北极星的所在。永远北方的指向,航海的人们通过它来辨别方向,而陈绍宸是顾盼的方向。婚礼上,他拥着她,在她耳边沉声道:“从此,我便是你的声音,你比画,我来说。”只因遇见你,所有的遗憾便都不再是遗憾。
  • 生命之树

    生命之树

    威廉·巴特勒·叶芝是爱尔兰著名诗人、剧作家和散文家,也是英语世界中最伟大的现代诗人之一,歌德堡诗歌奖、诺贝尔文学奖获得者。叶芝一生创作丰富,深受浪漫主义、唯美主义、神秘主义、象征主义的影响。《生命之树》这本散文集反映了他受到雪莱诗歌、布莱克浪漫主义、爱尔兰民间神秘主义等多方面的影响,是叶芝文学思想与艺术思想的结晶。
  • 逆命魔主

    逆命魔主

    每一个命格,都是一条走向绝世传奇的路!武道世界,命格为王。命格不再是算命先生嘴里的虚言,而是真实存在的武道之基。‘疾风劲草’命格,让你刀出如风,身如疾岚。‘天火燎原’命格,让你挥掌释烈焰,如祝融降世。‘羽化登仙’命格,让你状若神仙,真有白日飞升之机。……身患绝症而死的陈重穿越到这奇异的武道世界,凭借着‘逆天改命’系统,一步步换命,改命,逆命,将自己从‘七日必死’的命格困境里拉出来,成就一代武道神话。
  • 秘密

    秘密

    本书要阐明的是:纸上谈兵的人从来都不会成为真正有所作为的人。一个没有财富的人同样可以变得非常富有;一个不能成为总统或者国会议员的人同样能够获得成功。与那些只知道悲叹命运不公的人相比,善于把握机会的人要伟大得多;与具有高尚品格和良好道德素养的人相比,那些固守着粗俗的财产和行为野蛮的人真可谓卑劣至极。有很多东西比财富珍贵得多,比名声荣耀得多……
  • 妖怪约会名单

    妖怪约会名单

    偶然间,我捡到了一本妖名录,为了封印妖名录中妖怪的真身,我过起了与妖怪约会的生活,凤凰,九尾狐,青龙,纷纷被我攻略,混沌,白泽,金乌,统统推到在地。