Peppered Moth "Evolution"
- Study took place in industrial England (1800's)
- Start with mostly light-colored moths, a few dark
- Light moths hidden on light trees, dark eaten
- Industrial pollution turns trees dark
- Now dark moths hidden, light eaten
- Population shifted from mostly white to mostly dark
- Start with moths, end with moths!
- If trees had turned blue from polluting dye, would blue moths have developed?
- Natural selection here, but no evolution!
Notes:
The "peppered moth" example is probably the best known, or most often
cited proof of "evolution is action". As explained by Menton:
"The Peppered moth (Biston betularia) is typically a whitish moth covered
with black spots. This coloration provides an effective camouflage for the
moths as they rest on certain Birch trees. Like humans, however, these
moths can be found in a range of pigmentation from very black to very
white and all shades in between. In a much touted study in England it was
found that when the white trees, on which the moths rested, became dark
from industrial pollution, birds ate more of the lighter moths
(missing the darker ones). It came as no surprise that the population
of darker moths increased while the lighter ones decreased. It was further
observed (but rarely mentioned) that when cities cleaned up their air,
the trees got lighter and the lighter moths again predominated."
This is NATURAL SELECTION in action.
The problem is that there is NO EVOLUTION occurring (no increase in
complexity)! At the start of the story there are both light and dark
colored moths present. At the end of the story there are both light and
dark colored moths present. No new trait has been acquired.
The only difference is a shift in the color distribution in the population.
Development of resistance to antibiotics by bacterial strains is another
frequently heard story along the same lines. These are simply cases of
recombinations of existing genetic characteristics selectively preserved
in a changed environment, not examples demonstrating an increase in complexity.
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