VI
EVOLUTION GOING ON
EVOLUTION GOING ON
Evolution, as we have seen in a previous
chapter, is another word for race-history. It means the ceaseless process of
Becoming, linking generation to generation of living creatures. The Doctrine of
Evolution states the fact that the present is the child of the past and the
parent of the future. It comes to this, that the living plants and animals we
know are descended from ancestors on the whole simpler, and these from others
likewise simpler, and so on, back and back—till we reach the first living
creatures, of which, unfortunately, we know nothing. Evolution is a process of
racial change in a definite direction, whereby new forms arise, take root, and
flourish, alongside of or in the place of their ancestors, which were in most
cases rather simpler in structure and behaviour.
The rock-record, which cannot be wrong,
though we may read it wrongly, shows clearly that there was once a time in the
history of the Earth when the only backboned animals were Fishes. Ages passed,
and there evolved Amphibians, with fingers and toes, scrambling on to dry land.
Ages passed, and there evolved Reptiles, in bewildering profusion. There were
fish-lizards and sea-serpents, terrestrial dragons and flying dragons, a
prolific and varied stock. From the terrestrial Dinosaurs it seems that Birds
and Mammals arose. In succeeding ages there evolved all the variety of Birds
and all the variety of Mammals. Until at last arose the Man. The question is
whether similar processes of evolution are still going on.
We are so keenly aware of rapid
changes in mankind, though these concern the social heritage much more than the
flesh-and-blood natural inheritance, that we find no difficulty in the idea
that evolution is going on in mankind. We know the contrast between modern man
and primitive man, and we are convinced that in the past, at least, progress
has been a reality. That degeneration may set in is an awful
possibility—involution rather than evolution—but even if going back became for
a time the rule, we cannot give up the hope that the race would recover itself and
begin afresh to go forward. For although there have been retrogressions in the
history of life, continued through unthinkably long ages, and although great
races, the Flying Dragons for instance, have become utterly extinct, leaving no
successors whatsoever, we feel sure that there has been on the whole a progress
towards nobler, more masterful, more emancipated, more intelligent, and better
forms of life—a progress towards what mankind at its best has always regarded
as best, i.e. affording most enduring satisfaction. So we think of evolution
going on in mankind, evolution chequered by involution, but on the whole progressive
evolution.
Evolutionary Prospect for Man
It is not likely that man's body will admit
of great change, but there is room for some improvement, e.g. in the
superfluous length of the food-canal and the overcrowding of the teeth. It is
likely, however, that there will be constitutional changes, e.g. of prolonged
youthfulness, a higher standard of healthfulness, and a greater resistance to
disease. It is justifiable to look forward to great improvements in
intelligence and in control. The potentialities of the human brain, as it is,
are far from being utilised to the full, and new departures of promise are of
continual occurrence. What is of great importance is that the new departures or
variations which emerge in fine children should be fostered, not nipped in the
bud, by the social environment, education included. The evolutionary prospect
for man is promising.
PHOTOGRAPH OF A MEDIAN SECTION THROUGH THE SHELL OF
THE PEARLY NAUTILUS
It is only the large terminal chamber that is occupied
by the animal.
PHOTOGRAPH OF THE ENTIRE SHELL OF THE PEARLY NAUTILUS
The headquarters of the Nautilus are in the Indian and
Pacific Oceans. They sometimes swim at the surface of the sea, but they
usually creep slowly about on the floor of comparatively shallow water.
NAUTILUS
A section through the Pearly Nautilus, Nautilus
pompilius, common from Malay to Fiji. The shell is often about 9 inches long.
The animal lives in the last chamber only, but a tube (S) runs through the
empty chambers, perforating the partitions (SE). The bulk of the animal is
marked VM; the eye is shown at E; a hood is marked H; round the mouth there are
numerous lobes (L) bearing protrusible tentacles, some of which are shown. When
the animal is swimming near the surface the tentacles radiate out in all
directions, and it has been described as "a shell with something like a
cauliflower sticking out of it." The Pearly Nautilus is a good example of
a conservative type, for it began in the Triassic Era. But the family of
Nautiloids to which it belongs illustrates very vividly what is meant by a
dwindling race. The Nautiloids began in the Cambrian, reached their golden age
in the Silurian, and began to decline markedly in the Carboniferous. There are
2,500 extinct or fossil species of Nautiloids, and only 4 living to-day.
Photo: W. S. Berridge.
SHOEBILL
A bird of a savage nature, never mixing with other
marsh birds. According to Dr. Chalmers Mitchell, it shows affinities to herons,
storks, pelicans, and gannets, and is a representative of a type equal to both
herons and storks and falling between the two.
But it is very important to realise that
among plant and animals likewise, Evolution is going on.
The Fountain of Change:
Variability
On an ordinary big clock we do not readily
see that even the minute hand is moving, and if the clock struck only once in a
hundred years we can conceive of people arguing whether the hands did really
move at all. So it often is with the changes that go on from generation to
generation in living creatures. The flux is so slow, like the flowing of a
glacier, that some people fail to be convinced of its reality. And it must, of
course, be admitted that some kinds of living creatures, like the Lamp-shell Ligula
or the Pearly Nautilus, hardly change from age to age, whereas others, like
some of the birds and butterflies, are always giving rise to something new. The
Evening Primrose among plants, and the Fruit-fly, Drosophila, among animals,
are well-known examples of organisms which are at present in a sporting or
mutating mood.
Certain dark varieties of moth, e.g. of the
Peppered Moth, are taking the place of the paler type in some parts of England,
and the same is true of some dark forms of Sugar-bird in the West Indian
islands. Very important is the piece of statistics worked out by Professor R. C.
Punnett, that "if a population contains .001 per cent of a new variety,
and if that variety has even a 5 per cent selection advantage over the original
form, the latter will almost completely disappear in less than a hundred
generations." This sort of thing has been going on all over the world for
untold ages, and the face of animate nature has consequently changed.
We are impressed by striking
novelties that crop up—a clever dwarf, a musical genius, a calculating boy, a
cock with a 10 ft. tail, a "wonder-horse" with a mane reaching to the
ground, a tailless cat, a white blackbird, a copper beech, a Greater Celandine
with much cut up leaves; but this sort of mutation is common, and smaller, less
brusque variations are commoner still. They form the raw materials of
possible evolution. We are actually standing before an apparently
inexhaustible fountain of change. This is evolution going on.
The Sporting Jellyfish
It is of interest to consider a common
animal like the jellyfish Aurelia. It is admirably suited for a leisurely life
in the open sea, where it swims about by contracting its saucer-shaped body,
thus driving water out from its concavity. By means of millions of stinging
cells on its four frilled lips and on its marginal tentacles it is able to
paralyse and lasso minute crustaceans and the like, which it then wafts into
its mouth. It has a very eventful life-history, for it has in its early youth
to pass through a fixed stage, fastened to rock or seaweed, but it is a
successful animal, well suited for its habitat, and practically cosmopolitan in
its distribution. It is certainly an old-established creature. Yet it is very
variable in colour and in size, and even in internal structure. Very often it
is the size of a saucer or a soup-plate, but giants over two feet in diameter
are well known. Much more important, however, than variation in colour and size
are the inborn changes in structure. Normally a jellyfish has its parts in four
or multiples of four. Thus it has four frilled lips, four tufts of digestive
filaments in its stomach, and four brightly coloured reproductive organs. It
has eight sense-organs round the margin of its disc, eight branched and eight
unbranched radial canals running from the central stomach to a canal round the
circumference. The point of giving these details is just this, that every now
and then we find a jellyfish with its parts in sixes, fives, or threes, and
with a multitude of minor idiosyncrasies. Even in the well-established
jellyfish there is a fountain of change.