Who needs Darwin?


The stickleback of BC

The current issue of The Scientist contains a shocking little opinion piece, Why Do We Invoke Darwin? Professor Phillip Skell can't find much use for the theory of evolution in the field of experimental biology.

"While the great majority of biologists would probably agree with Theodosius Dobzhansky's dictum that 'nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution,' most can conduct their work quite happily without particular reference to evolutionary ideas," A.S. Wilkins, editor of the journal BioEssays, wrote in 2000. "Evolution would appear to be the indispensable unifying idea and, at the same time, a highly superfluous one."

I would tend to agree. Certainly, my own research with antibiotics during World War II received no guidance from insights provided by Darwinian evolution. Nor did Alexander Fleming's discovery of bacterial inhibition by penicillin. I recently asked more than 70 eminent researchers if they would have done their work differently if they had thought Darwin's theory was wrong. The responses were all the same: No.

I also examined the outstanding biodiscoveries of the past century: the discovery of the double helix; the characterization of the ribosome; the mapping of genomes; research on medications and drug reactions; improvements in food production and sanitation; the development of new surgeries; and others. I even queried biologists working in areas where one would expect the Darwinian paradigm to have most benefited research, such as the emergence of resistance to antibiotics and pesticides. Here, as elsewhere, I found that Darwin's theory had provided no discernible guidance, but was brought in, after the breakthroughs, as an interesting narrative gloss.

In the peer-reviewed literature, the word "evolution" often occurs as a sort of coda to academic papers in experimental biology. Is the term integral or superfluous to the substance of these papers? To find out, I substituted for "evolution" some other word - "Buddhism," "Aztec cosmology," or even "creationism." I found that the substitution never touched the paper's core. This did not surprise me. From my conversations with leading researchers it had became clear that modern experimental biology gains its strength from the availability of new instruments and methodologies, not from an immersion in historical biology.


I'm not sure someone writing a hundred years from now could make the same argument. But today I think the professor has a point. We are still waiting for an effective vaccine for AIDS while the debate over the origins of HIV rages on.

Still, I wouldn't throw On the Origins of Species out the window. The natural historians have been making progress in studying evolution.

For example, consider the stickleback fish found only in fresh water lakes on the islands of British Columbia. Their isolation and fast breeding make them a useful means of tracking the development of species.

Alas, the benthic stickleback in Hadley Lake on Lasqueti Island have become extinct, eaten by recently introduced catfish. This raises the difficult question of what conservation efforts for the remaining species can be made without tampering with the evolutionary evidence they provide. It is possible that the survival of BC's stickleback may depend on research into Darwin's theory.

Posted: Fri - September 9, 2005 at 05:54 AM          


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