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Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
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From the BBC:
Quote:
Quote:
RBH |
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#2 |
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Psh.
I'll be impressed when they evolve into penguins. |
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#3 |
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I'll be impressed when they develop wombs.
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I'm impressed.
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Evolution. Well yes. The trouble for us in the E/C confrontation is that this was not an example of speciation, and the article holds open the potential for an outside introduction of the gene.
Interesting to me and you, but ignorable by creationists. |
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#7 |
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Why would anyone find it surprising that a mutation with tremendous survival advantage would spread like wildfire?
How many generations is 6 years for these butterflies? |
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#8 |
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Assuming that the butterfly in question is Hypolimnas bolina, which is the species usually quoted in these studies (and whose males have the characteristic "blue moon" mark) then from egg to imago usually takes something like 6 to 8 weeks. Assume 8 weeks at the longest. Since the butterfly lives in equatorial rainforest regions and can breed year round without interruption, then 6 years equals about 39 generations.
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#9 |
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The paper says it took 'barely 10 generations' for the sex ratio to change from 100:1 to 1:1, but it doesn't say anything about the origin of the proposed parasite suppressor genes. An earlier similar paper which is referenced (Hornett, et al., 2006) also does not give any insight to the nature of the actual change responsible for an observed supressor effect, although they can deduce some things from the simple mendelian genetics they perform, such as the likelihood that the trait is based on a single genetic locus.
TTFN, WK |
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#10 |
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