Evolution in Action: Interplay of Environment, Constraint, and Chance
摘要
On a humid morning in coastal India, an ecologist walks through a rice-wheat field and pulls up a small weed called Phalaris minor. A few decades ago, this grass succumbed easily to herbicides. Today it shrugs off multiple chemicals and continues to choke the crop. Nearby, a doctor reads a report warning that Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains resistant to multiple antibiotics are rising across India. At a laboratory, researchers watch Escherichia coli bacteria adapt to UV irradiation. Halfway across the world, the medium ground finches of Daphne Major in the Galápagos Islands evolve larger or smaller beaks as the climate flips between drought and rain. Though these examples span organisms, levels of biological organization, and continents, they are united by a common logic. Each scene reflects well-documented evolutionary change unfolding in the real world, shaped by the interplay of environment, biological constraint, and chance, which forms the central focus of this article.