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Thursday, January 22, 2009

Darwin Was Wrong?

The cover is this week's issue of New Scientist is sure to get your attention.

I happen to believe that the science of evolutionary biology has moved on since 1859, and I happen to be a proponent of evolutionary processes that Darwin new nothing about. Nevertheless, proclaiming that "Darwin was wrong" is a different story. That's an egregious example of journalistic hype and it's unacceptable in a magazine like New Scientist.

The main article is Why Darwin was wrong about the tree of life. The author is science journalist Graham Lawton.

The essence of the story is that the early history of evolution is probably characterized by a net of life and not a traditional tree. The "net" metaphor is due to many example of lateral gene transfer.
Ever since Darwin the tree has been the unifying principle for understanding the history of life on Earth. At its base is LUCA, the Last Universal Common Ancestor of all living things, and out of LUCA grows a trunk, which splits again and again to create a vast, bifurcating tree. Each branch represents a single species; branching points are where one species becomes two. Most branches eventually come to a dead end as species go extinct, but some reach right to the top - these are living species. The tree is thus a record of how every species that ever lived is related to all others right back to the origin of life.

For much of the past 150 years, biology has largely concerned itself with filling in the details of the tree. "For a long time the holy grail was to build a tree of life," says Eric Bapteste, an evolutionary biologist at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris, France. A few years ago it looked as though the grail was within reach. But today the project lies in tatters, torn to pieces by an onslaught of negative evidence. Many biologists now argue that the tree concept is obsolete and needs to be discarded. "We have no evidence at all that the tree of life is a reality," says Bapteste. That bombshell has even persuaded some that our fundamental view of biology needs to change.
As it happens, I was at a function last night with Jan Sapp of York University (Toronto, Canada). Loyal Sandwalk readers might recall a series of articles on the Three Domain Hypothesis. The articles were based on a book edited by Jan Sapp. Sapp is a supporter, as am I, of the scheme advocated by Ford Doolittle (see below).


This net, or web, of life is characteristic of the earliest stages of evolution when all organisms were single cells and the distinction between eukaryotes and prokaryotes was barely discernible. Once the main groups rose out of the web, they evolved pretty much as you light expect by binary speciation events. This gives rise to a traditional tree-like pattern.

As Jan and I discussed, for the last three billion years of evolution the tree of life is a very good metaphor for evolution. Darwin was mostly right about that. On the other hand, the New Scientist article discusses some problems with the tree of life that extend beyond the early history. It makes several valid points that should make everyone skeptical of claims about evolution that are too simple. The tree isn't perfect.

The bottom line is that it's unfair to say that Darwin was wrong. It's as unfair as saying the Newton was wrong because of Einstein. We need to recognize that modern evolutionary biology is an improvement over the view of the Victorian founder of the field, but a cover saying that Darwin was wrong conveys the wrong message. It suggests that up until recently scientists believed that Darwin was right about everything.

A better headline might be: "More evidence that Charles Darwin didn't know everything there is to be known about evolution when he published his book in 1859."

UPDATE: In a surprising development, the IDiots at Uncommon Descent have picked up on these recent (sic) developments in evolutionary theory. Paul Nelson, a Young Earth Creationist philosopher, writes: “The tree of life is being politely buried”.

49 comments :

Eamon Knight said...

Of course, the Usual Suspects have been known to abuse Doolittle's ideas to their own ends.

Johnny said...

So, is the title an outright media ploy - pandering for profit – or, does Lawton lack some fundamental understanding of scientific progress? Either way, I would have expected more from New Scientist. I wonder if there’s an editor catching heat over somewhere…

Anonymous said...

The essence of the story is that the early history of evolution is probably characterized by a net of life and not a traditional tree. The "net" metaphor is due to many example of lateral gene transfer.

Lateral gene transfer depends upon a shared genetic code. A shared genetic code is evidence of a common origin. The "net" approach is not a rejection of a common origin, but a rejection of the notion that the branches of the "tree" have always divided and never merged.

John Pieret said...

"More evidence that Charles Darwin didn't know everything there is to be known about evolution when he published his book in 1859."

You forgot the "Duh" at the end.

Don said...

How about "Darwin was right, but is wrong"? This indicates that he got it right 150 years ago, but has been corrected and amplified since then.

Anonymous said...

And, of course, the people who have identified and defended the web model are not creationists but evolutionists.

Anonymous said...

Sheesh. How totally irresponsible. Create an inflammatory cover to generate a false controversy and sell magazines... and in the process, give the IDers one more piece of fuel for their bonfire of stupidity. Nice work, guys.

Tatarize said...

You know it's more due to the fact that the genes are only often kept in check by being completely contained within certain specific species that this "revelation" comes even remotely close to a revelation.

Rather than tracking the origins of organisms we should be properly looking at what must necessarily be a tree due to the nature of evolution: The tree of genes. We simply aren't there yet, but we're getting closer.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, in other news, Newton was wrong too. Poor chap didn't get that gravitational redshift, alright?

Todd Oakley said...

Larry - I hadn't seen your take before I wrote my own post on it here

The Science Pundit said...

There is still something crucial missing in the net of life. When will the lowly virus get the respect it deserves? I realize that many biologists don't even consider viruses to be "alive", but if we're talking about origins and the where and how of the distribution of genetic material, they cannot just be ignored.

octopod said...

Whoa, easy on the three million years there. Lateral gene transfer is still extremely common *in non-eukaryotes*.

That is, the "tree" model is valid -- but only for relatively modern multicellular eukaryotes. Which, to be fair, was all Darwin thought he was talking about.

Unknown said...

The magazine is just trolling for sales. It's sad they have to go that low.

Enjoy.

Dale said...

Nice work knocking down this latest fake controversy.

The ID/creationists can be expected to run with this magazine story, quote-mine it, and otherwise play their games. But sadly for them, it does nothing to advance their ideology because what they're peddling still isn't true.

Anonymous said...

My thoughts, here:
http://rhinocrisy.org/2009/01/darwin-was-a-long-time-ago/
including the money quote from Doolittle on creationists:
"... [The tree of life] should not be an essential element in our struggle against those who doubt the validity of evolutionary theory, who can take comfort from this challenge to the TOL only by a willful misunderstanding of its import."

Neil said...

Oh dear - I saw the snippet in my feed reader, but didn't follow up.

What's amazing to me is how much Darwin got right, based on what was known at the time. For example, he knew nothing of genes or genetics. The great thing is that Mendel knew nothing of Darwin either, yet you take the work of each, put it together and it fits perfectly. To me, this is great evidence that something is "right" or describes something "real" - two bodies of work, unconnected, unaware of each other, yet perfectly complementary.

Anonymous said...

Whatever you think of the overall picture about the "tree of life" today, I think it's only fair to judge Darwin's work for what he actually studied, with the knowledge of his day. (As I would like to think that historians do, but then I'm not an historian!)

It seems to me that there are broadly two classes of things that Darwin didn't know about (and more-or-less could not have known about) that are involved: detailed studies of the evolution of bacteria, fungi and viruses; and the lower-level molecular mechanisms of genetics.

For the species Darwin did examine, limited to the mechanisms he was able to study, the tree of life concept was fine and largely still is. It's just more knowledge on other species and lower-level mechanisms has elaborated the concept since his time.

Doolittle's work is (was?), as ever, wonderful. I remember reading his earlier papers as a kid, teaching myself "bioinformatics" in the evening at the university library (there were no bioinformatics courses at the time).

As for the title on the cover, can you say someone was wrong about something that they were not referring to or could not know about?

Anonymous said...

Unfortunately, this is becoming all too characteristic of the NS. The only science some of their staff journos know seems to be the 'social' sort.

ERV said...

The Science Pundit-- When will the lowly virus get the respect it deserves?
*terrorist fist-jab*

Gadfly said...

The Texas State Board of Education’s wingnut side also picked up the ball and ran with Lawson.

Anonymous said...

Here is how I would put it:

While Darwin originated the study of evolutionary biology, he did not conclude it.

Anonymous said...

New Scientist is a rag. Always has been.

Anonymous said...

Graham Lawton here.
A gentle plea: please read the article before shooting off about it. Judging from these comments most of you haven't bothered. That is "totally unnaceptable" (to use a phrase Larry is fond of when lecturing journalists).

I'm happy to have a reasonable discussion of the ideas in the feature, once you've all stopped flying off the handle about the cover line of the magazine (not the headline of the article, or the article itself) and what you assume I wrote.

Oh, and Johnny: sorry to disillusion you but I've got a pretty good understanding of scientific progress. You, however, lack a fundamental understanding of how the media works.

There, I've flamed you back. Feels good, doesn't it. Can we talk like grown ups now?

Anonymous said...

Graham Lawton wrote:

You, however, lack a fundamental understanding of how the media works.

Enlighten, please. No, really. I actually am interested in which bits you feel responsible for, and which were out of your control, and *how* you feel about those bits out of your control (e.g., the cover, presumably).

Anonymous said...

Hi Jud,
Happy to.

The way we work here is that the writer of the piece generally has almost no say over the headline, standfirst and other bits of "page furniture". These are the resonsibility of the copy editor and the sub-editors. The online version often has its own headline, which again is out of the control of the writer (in this case the magazine headline is "Uprooting Darwin's Tree").

Coverlines, similarly, are written not by the writer but by senior editors with the express purpose of selling the magazine (the line between marketing and journalism blurs a little here).

As I'm a senior editor too, however, I can't and won't claim that the coverline was entirely beyond my control. Not my ultimate decision, but I was in on the discussions. We knew we were courting controversy but the feeling was that the story was solid enough to allow us to be provocative and, in any case, the statement is true.

So I feel very strong ownership of the article itself, particularly the print version (and I totally stand by the story, which is the product of weeks of hard work, extensive interviews with scientists, a stack of journal papers and much thought, despite what some bloggers are saying). I feel some ownership of the front cover "sell", though as always I'm acutely aware that it is 50% journalism, 50% sales pitch.

Hope that answers your question.

Anonymous said...

Hi Graham,

Do you endorse nonesense statements like this one from Bapteste?

"We have no evidence at all that the tree of life is a reality"

Do you think reporting this absurd blanket statement as fact is responsible journalism? Your article goes on to provide some degree of qualification (e.g. "While vertical descent is no longer the only game in town, it is still the best way of explaining how multicellular organisms are related to one another - a tree of 51 per cent, maybe."). However, were I writing the piece, I'd be immediately pulling up Bapteste on his idiotic and thoroughly unhelpful hyperbole.

Anonymous said...

"A gentle plea: please read the article before shooting off about it."


We don't need to read the article to criticize the cover page. We've long known that Darwin was wrong about a great many things. Turning it into front page news 150 years after the fact makes it seem like he was wrong about the *one* thing that really matters.

Anonymous said...

"We knew we were courting controversy but the feeling was that the story was solid enough to allow us to be provocative and, in any case, the statement is true... as always I'm acutely aware that it is 50% journalism, 50% sales pitch."


In other words, "We did it for the lulz".

Eamon Knight said...

UPDATE: In a surprising development, the IDiots at Uncommon Descent have picked up on these recent (sic) developments in evolutionary theory. Paul Nelson, a Young Earth Creationist philosopher, writes: “The tree of life is being politely buried”.

Well, speak of the devil. That's exactly the Usual Suspect I was referring to....

Anonymous said...

Steve F:
Blimey, mate, keep your hair on.

Quoting somebody isn't tantamount to endorsing their views. It's about reporting what experts are thinking and getting their views on record. It shows that you're not just making stuff up, but reporting something that is really going on.

Anonymous said...

Lawton:

People here are ABSOLUTELY justified in judging this by the cover alone; that's EXACTLY what the creationists are doing, and that's why we're reacting. Notice that your work is now popping up across the IDiot blogosphere.

If you had even a semblance of a clue, you'd have known this was going to happen, and that the sensationalist headline would be acting against your magazine's ostensible purpose of informing people about science.

You and your magazine are INCREDIBLY irresponsible. PERIOD.

Anonymous said...

Graham,

My hair is on. I dunno why you'd think otherwise. To me, responsible journalism is reporting people's opinions and then providing (where appropriate) necessary balance. I'm sorry you don't see it that way.

Bapteste is talking in blanket absurdities. Now that doesn't reflect well on him. But ultimately the article is your responsbility.

Anonymous said...

Bueller_007 said: Notice that your work is now popping up across the IDiot blogosphere.

If you had even a semblance of a clue, you'd have known this was going to happen,...

I notice in New Scientist's editorial on this article it says: "None of this should give succour to creationists, whose blinkered universe is doubtless already buzzing with the news that "New Scientist has announced Darwin was wrong". Expect to find excerpts ripped out of context and presented as evidence that biologists are deserting the theory of evolution en masse. They are not."
It seems those idiots at New Scientsit do have a semblance of a clue.

Anonymous said...

Anon:

My point was that creationists would not even read the article, but just delight in the headline. I have little doubt that the article itself is based more or less on sound science that would refute creationist claims.

The comment that you cite means very little to those who actually bother to read the article, and is hidden away from those who don't. In other words, it has no effect on those who don't.

A responsible cover would have included an excoriation of creationists.

Johnny said...

Thanks Graham - I can feel the disillusionment enlightening my mind now…


Why's Graham so glum?: http://ecographica.blogspot.com/2009/01/whys-graham-so-glum-lawton-critiqued.html

Anonymous said...

Graham:

re I'm happy to have a reasonable discussion of the ideas in the feature, once you've all stopped flying off the handle about the cover line of the magazine (not the headline of the article, or the article itself) and what you assume I wrote.

If this is what you want, could I suggest that you not paste everyone with the same brush? (You are also assuming that everyone has not read the article or at least got the gist of it.)

The headline used certainly can be misleading, you essentially admitted as much. In my opinion, if you are going to use a "racy" or "teasing" headline, the article is going to have to go out of its way to disclaim any misinterpretations of the headline. In this case, I am not convinced that has been done.

I don't think this style of headline is appropriate for a science magazine: it's usually used to try to create major controversy where the the reality is minor controversy or even none. The terms "media beat up" or "hype" come to mind. It has it's place in "entertainment" publications like the Sun (What, it carries real news?! Just kidding.)

There is a controversy of sorts, but it's more minor than the headline makes out and not really about if "Darwin was right" or not.

Turning to the science and the article itself, there are many points that you don't make clear enough to readers, I feel. I realise you can't cover it all one small article, but I think the focus on presenting examples of one process with little balance of the other mechanisms and issues isn't helpful. These add complexity to the story, but if you are going to raise this topic, you really can't avoid these I feel.

I'm going to toss out a few random examples to give some idea of what I mean. This aren't meant to be definitive (or even especially accurate), but rather to show considerations that might have been included that might lead to a more balanced presentation of the issue. (I've also stuck with simpler cases that might be easier to present to a general readership.)

More than just observing examples of HGT is needed to claim that these events are species-forming. This, in turn, brings up that a gene-based phylogenetic tree constructed from a limited number of genes may not necessarily be congruent with the "true" species tree.

As a hypothetical (counter-)example, if a small number of individuals acquire a gene via HGT, the population may "drift" to have this new gene present at a high frequency with no speciation event occur.

You need to make clearer to readers that in biology exceptions to the rule are expected (I usually like to cite Jacob François' famous line "evolution is a tinkerer" for this). Finding a group of organisms exhibiting high levels of HGT or specific examples won't count for a lot in terms of over-throwing a larger generalisation.

With that in mind, you don't present the frequency of speciation events due to HGT against speciation events not needing HGT, and for what lines of life in a way that I think a naïve reader might get a feel for the balance of the two. At worst, presenting a list examples where HGT has a role without balancing it with cases where it does not might lead a naïve reader to believe that HGT is the only mechanism for speciation for all forms of life!

On that note, your extrapolating from the examples you give for eukaryotes stretches your argument too far, in my opinion. Among other things, you make no mention that for "higher" eukaryotes, new genes must be incorporated into and passed on via the germ line, an issue not faced by single-celled life, which puts considerable limitations on acquiring new genes via HGT compared with single-cellular life.

Another thing you might have explored is if the mechanisms seen in eukaryotes are used in forming most species, or predominantly in higher-order groups.

In the case of bacteria in particular, you can even turn your argument completely on it's head and ask if it is the definition of "species" that needs revising, rather than the trees, a point you don't raise. That is, you could have considered if the traditional "species" notion is appropriate for single-celled life and viruses (nods to ERV ;-) ).

There are other science points, but that's me done for now :-) You have presented it as an argument for "knocking over" "the" tree of life, rather than elaborating it. This strikes me as a journalistic construct, "creating a conflict". Wording like "the battle over the tree", is pure journalism, of course, as are some other passages which read as hyperbole to me, e.g. "But today the project lies in tatters, torn to pieces by an onslaught of negative evidence." This isn't at all how it is perceived, at least to this scientist. In my experience scientists are more likely to say "Hmm. That's interesting".

Just a personal note to close this overly long ramble. A little while I ago I remarked to a friend that if I buy a magazine, it'd usually be NewScentist. She replied to the effect that she thought it to be sensationalist. I realised since then that I haven't actually bought a copy for some years (budgets and all that). Since then I have reconsidered my opinion of NewScientist. If I were to judge by the current headlines and hype, I probably wouldn't look at a lot of the issues. Just food for thought. You might want to consider that you are alienating some of your potential readership with headlines like that, and articles on "big" topics playing only or largely one side of an argument.

Hank Roberts said...

Duh!

Tree of Life: Aspen Patch, Not Mighty Oak.

"... an aspen's lateral roots produce ... a large network of interconnected roots that can produce new trees for over a thousand years."

There's your illustration.

Above the ground we the brief appearance; but the network _is_ the genome.

(Why does this sound familiar?)

Years ago, I gave up writing New Scientist to complain, after an honest editroid finally replied to me: "New Scientist is an entertainment magazine, not a science magazine."

NS attains the industry standard for accuracy in an entertainment magazine:

"No acute and immediate risk of death or injury from from reading, but not to be relied on."

Remember the Newsweek cover so greatly beloved of the blogomatics antiscience folks who repost it? This one. Wanta bet you're joining it with the NS cover?

http://newsbusters.org/static/2007/08/2007-08-05NewsweekGlobalWarming.jpg

Jens Knudsen (Sili) said...

"The tree of life is being politely buried."

They can't even get their metaphors right. You cut down trees. You don't bury them. Sheeeessssh.

Anonymous said...

Just read the latest copies of National Geo and Smithsonian to read massive positive articles about Darwin.

Matthew Warner said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
RBH said...

John Pieret points out that the New Scientist article has already apparently been cited by a creationist Board member in support of weakening the Texas science standards (see here for the original story:

Barbara Cargill, a Republican who supported the weaknesses requirement, said there have been “significant challenges” to the theory of evolution and she cited a recent news article in which a European scientist disputed Darwin’s “tree of life” showing common ancestors for all living things.

Where's Graham Lawton these days?

RBH said...

Argh. Screwed up the URL of the original story. It's here.

And what's more entrancing, New Scientist reported the same thing, but neglected to mention Cargill's implicit citation of Lawton's "Darwin Was Wrong" story as support for her proposal.

Unknown said...

The New Scientist is probably trying to catch the attention of creationists and have new readers. My guess is that creationists will only read the cover and fill their blogs with completely nonsenses about the tree of life. That's not the way a scientific magazine should vulgarize science. Scientific American has chosen a different approach, their cover title is: The Evolution Of Evolution - How Darwin's theory survives, thrives and reshapes the world.
I am "amazed" on how intense is the debate about evolution in the US. In Europe it's not even a subject of discussion. All my support and encouragement to all the Americans who defend science against superstitions.

Anonymous said...

its good

James said...

In the high-stakes game of preserving sage grouse, biologists say they’re still figuring out how the birds will react to the influx of wind turbines rising up from the wide-open sagebrush plains where the birds evolved.

petershakespearebaxter said...

The tree of live is a tree of death with just a couple of dying branches on it thanks to Darwin's idiotic idea that is wrong

Unknown said...

Wait a minute guys, there's something going on here, because, look what Dr.Craig Venter said "The tree of life is an artifact of some early scientific studies that aren't really holding up…So there is not a tree of life." a this guy is no scientific know nothing!

Faizal Ali said...

That statement is rather commonly misrepresented by dishonest creationists. Here is an explanation by a creationist who is a bit more honest:

Dueling Scientists and the Tree of Life: Analyzing the ID Response

Jass said...

@lutesuite

That statement is rather commonly misrepresented by dishonest creationists. Here is an explanation by a creationist who is a bit more honest

Dishonest? Really?

Craig Venter Discusses the Tree of Life