NewsTrack: Study disputes Darwinian theory
Jun 11
DAVIS, Calif., June 11 (UPI) --
A Darwinian theory is being disputed by two U.S. botanists who are studying columbine (Aquilegia) flowers.
Justen Whittall and Scott Hodges of the University of California-Davis said the flowers' long petals might have evolved in a predictable way but not for the reason Darwin predicted.
Whittall and Hodges assessed the evolutionary relatedness of Aquilegia -- a group of herbaceous perennial plants in which each petal is modified into an elongated nectar spur. The scientists report they have determined the nectar spurs evolved in a recurring and directional fashion, becoming longer and longer over time.
The team said that shape evolved in a punctuated manner, with plants adapting to new species of unrelated pollinators, each with a longer tongue than its predecessor. That theory, however, is at odds with Darwin's prediction that a co-evolutionary conflict drove the increase in length of both nectar spur and pollinator's tongue.
The study appears in the journal Nature.
Copyright 2007 by United Press International
This page is automatically generated from RSS news feeds from United Press International (UPI).