SSS 2012-01-24(在线收听) |
This is Scientific American Sixty Seconds Science, I'm Sophie Bushwick, got a minute? When Mexican tetra fish moved into darker caves long ago, they evolved to deal with the dark by becoming albino and going blind. A new research shows that the changes various cavefish populations went through occurred repeatedly. A massive textbook example of convergent revolution. The studys in the journal BioMed Central Evolutionary Biology.
To determine how the dark-dwelling fish evolved their sightlessness, researchers tested the DNA of 11 Mexican cavefish populations; they compared the genes with those of the tetra populations that lived out in the light. Originally researches had believed that all of the cave populations were descended from a single group of tetra fish that went underground and then went blind. But the cavefish genes told a different story: the 11 populations had five separate evolutionary origins, with different groups independently experiencing and selecting an eyeless mutation. Although the surfacing cave-dwelling fish frequently mix, interbreeding has not eradicated cavefish blindness, which means that evolution is actively selecting blindness, perhaps because investing bodily resources in sight is a waste of energy in the dark.
Thanks for the minute for Scientific American Sixty Seconds Science, I'm Sophie Bushwick. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/sasss/2012/1/170298.html |