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Judi Lynn

(160,524 posts)
Wed Mar 13, 2019, 01:47 AM Mar 2019

How Beauty Is Making Scientists Rethink Evolution

How Beauty Is Making Scientists Rethink Evolution
The extravagant splendor of the animal kingdom can’t be explained by natural selection alone — so how did it come to be?



By Ferris Jabr
Jan. 9, 2019

808
A male flame bowerbird is a creature of incandescent beauty. The hue of his plumage transitions seamlessly from molten red to sunshine yellow. But that radiance is not enough to attract a mate. When males of most bowerbird species are ready to begin courting, they set about building the structure for which they are named: an assemblage of twigs shaped into a spire, corridor or hut. They decorate their bowers with scores of colorful objects, like flowers, berries, snail shells or, if they are near an urban area, bottle caps and plastic cutlery. Some bowerbirds even arrange the items in their collection from smallest to largest, forming a walkway that makes themselves and their trinkets all the more striking to a female — an optical illusion known as forced perspective that humans did not perfect until the 15th century.

Yet even this remarkable exhibition is not sufficient to satisfy a female flame bowerbird. Should a female show initial interest, the male must react immediately. Staring at the female, his pupils swelling and shrinking like a heartbeat, he begins a dance best described as psychotically sultry. He bobs, flutters, puffs his chest. He crouches low and rises slowly, brandishing one wing in front of his head like a magician’s cape. Suddenly his whole body convulses like a windup alarm clock. If the female approves, she will copulate with him for two or three seconds. They will never meet again.

The bowerbird defies traditional assumptions about animal behavior. Here is a creature that spends hours meticulously curating a cabinet of wonder, grouping his treasures by color and likeness. Here is a creature that single-beakedly builds something far more sophisticated than many celebrated examples of animal toolmaking; the stripped twigs that chimpanzees use to fish termites from their mounds pale in comparison. The bowerbird’s bower, as at least one scientist has argued, is nothing less than art. When you consider every element of his courtship — the costumes, dance and sculpture — it evokes a concept beloved by the German composer Richard Wagner: Gesamtkunstwerk, a total work of art, one that blends many different forms and stimulates all the senses.

This extravagance is also an affront to the rules of natural selection. Adaptations are meant to be useful — that’s the whole point — and the most successful creatures should be the ones best adapted to their particular environments. So what is the evolutionary justification for the bowerbird’s ostentatious display? Not only do the bowerbird’s colorful feathers and elaborate constructions lack obvious value outside courtship, but they also hinder his survival and general well-being, draining precious calories and making him much more noticeable to predators.



More:
http://tinyurl.com/yytk8p9l

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How Beauty Is Making Scientists Rethink Evolution (Original Post) Judi Lynn Mar 2019 OP
excellent long nerdy essay handmade34 Mar 2019 #1
these are cool phenomena ProfessorPlum Mar 2019 #2

handmade34

(22,756 posts)
1. excellent long nerdy essay
Wed Mar 13, 2019, 08:17 AM
Mar 2019
Photos alone are worth the read!!

"...evolution is an intricate clockwork of physics, biology and perception in which every moving part influences another in both subtle and profound ways. Its gears are so innumerable and dynamic — so susceptible to serendipity and mishap — that even a single outcome of its ceaseless ticking can confound science for centuries

Beauty is the world’s answer to the audacity of a flower. It is the way a bee spills across the lip of a yawning buttercup; it is the care with which a satin bowerbird selects a hibiscus bloom; it is the impulse to recreate water lilies with oil and canvas; it is the need to place roses on a grave."

ProfessorPlum

(11,256 posts)
2. these are cool phenomena
Wed Mar 13, 2019, 02:18 PM
Mar 2019

but sexual selection is not a mystery to evolutionary biologists nor is it contrary to natural selection in general. Darwin spent quite a lot of time on it.

It is true that the results of sexual selection often counterbalance survival considerations . . . but they never go against reproductive fitness, where the creature has to both survive _and_ attract a mate.

Sexual selection can be rapid and dramatic compared to other forms of selection. One school of thought holds that the human brain - our creative and adaptable cerebrum - evolved so rapidly because of sexual selection. (the "chicks dig brainy primates" theory).

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