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Posted by Sunsnail on Dec-11-2006 03:20:

Anyone familiar with evolution?

I'm pretty familiar with it but I have this one question.

In general, plants or animals that can produce offspring the best will pass their dna onto their children, which then become better at producing offspring as well. My question is why do some plants produce seeds that are utter shit at growing? I'm talking about 1 in 100 seeds will grow into a plant. Why does the plant waste so much energy producing seeds which will do nothing? Why hasnt evolution done anything there in terms of seed viability?

(this post is a rant because I can't grow some plants for shit)


Posted by Ivand on Dec-11-2006 03:23:

is proof that god exists


Posted by Sunsnail on Dec-11-2006 03:24:

no no no... this isnt against evolution, I'm asking a question about it.


Posted by Marc Summers on Dec-11-2006 03:27:

Reproduction isn't that simple. The idea is to have the best genes passed down to the offspring, but sometimes you get the shit end of the stick and have a downs syndrome baby.

Your plants are just making enough seeds to ensure the survival of their genes.


Posted by Psy-T on Dec-11-2006 03:29:

direct your question to mr.opus from the pdd.


Posted by Sunsnail on Dec-11-2006 03:31:

I don't understand though how a mutation that causes an organism to have less chances of producing offspring and surviving can cause the plant to become more successful.

quote:
Originally posted by Psy-T
direct your question to mr.opus from the pdd.


good idea.


Posted by Silky Johnson on Dec-11-2006 03:31:

There's a glitch in the matrix!!!


*explodes*


Posted by MrJiveBoJingles on Dec-11-2006 03:33:

If we are looking at things from an evolutionary perspective, every organism has a single goal: to reproduce its genes as many times as possible by producing offspring that will themselves reproduce. There are two general ways you can go about this with roughly equal investments of energy: (1) just throwing so many copies of yourself out there that a few are bound to survive (making hundreds or thousands of flimsy seeds -- called "r-selection") or (2) throwing fewer copies out there while caring for them better (fruit-bearing plants, for example -- called "K-selection"). The level of energy investment is important because it is advantageous for organisms to stick around and reproduce themselves multiple times; reproductive times are often risky for lots of organisms, so any form of reproduction that will be too energy-intensive (example: making hundreds of offspring and trying to protect each and every one of them) gets selected against, since the ones who risk too much with individual reproductive acts end up getting killed off by disease or predators.

The plants and animals alive today are the ones whose ancestors happened to do what they needed to do to survive: not necessarily anything more or less. And due to the wide variations in environment and all sorts of other variables, "survival of the luckiest" might be a better way to describe what happens in evolution than "survival of the fittest."


Posted by Sunsnail on Dec-11-2006 03:36:

quote:
Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles
If we are looking at things from an evolutionary perspective, every organism has a single goal: to reproduce its genes as many times as possible by producing offspring that will themselves reproduce. There are two general ways you can go about this with roughly equal investments of energy: (1) just throwing so many copies of yourself out there that a few are bound to survive (making hundreds or thousands of flimsy seeds -- called "r-selection") or (2) throwing fewer copies out there while caring for them better (fruit-bearing plants, for example -- called "K-selection"). The level of energy investment is important because it is advantageous for organisms to stick around and reproduce themselves multiple times; reproductive times are often risky for lots of organisms, so any form of reproduction that will be too energy-intensive (example: making hundreds of offspring and trying to protect each and every one of them) gets selected against, since the ones who risk too much with individual reproductive acts end up getting killed off by disease or predators.

The plants and animals alive today are the ones whose ancestors happened to do what they needed to do to survive: not necessarily anything more or less. And due to the wide variations in environment and all sorts of other variables, "survival of the luckiest" might be a better way to describe what happens in evolution than "survival of the fittest."


Wow, thanks for the very nice reply. (most) Plants don't exactly protect their offspring (or at least expend energy to do so), so what is the logic that a plant would spend the energy to create many seeds that aren't able to grow?

I suppose since chance is a huge part of nature that perhaps there isn't a benefit to doing this. Just wondering if there was or not.


Posted by montie on Dec-11-2006 03:45:

quote:
Originally posted by Sunsnail
Wow, thanks for the very nice reply. (most) Plants don't exactly protect their offspring (or at least expend energy to do so), so what is the logic that a plant would spend the energy to create many seeds that aren't able to grow?

I suppose since chance is a huge part of nature that perhaps there isn't a benefit to doing this. Just wondering if there was or not.


Well it all comes down to how much energy is invested in each seed. I think what your talking about is R-Selection which Mr. BoJangles described.
(correct me if i'm wrong)
but in this type of reproduction method, plants invest little energy in creating each seed, thus it is more economical for them to produce massive amounts of seeds and have very few of them survive. they don't expend the energy to provide extras to care for their young.


Posted by MrJiveBoJingles on Dec-11-2006 03:47:

quote:
Wow, thanks for the very nice reply. (most) Plants don't exactly protect their offspring (or at least expend energy to do so), so what is the logic that a plant would spend the energy to create many seeds that aren't able to grow?

Yeah, it sounds odd to speak of "protection" in the case of plants, but think of seed-carriers like pineapples and coconuts as opposed to dandelions, for example. It takes a lot more energy to make a pineapple or a coconut, so a lot fewer of them get made, but the payoff is that the seeds have their own "food" for a long time and so each individual seed is more likely to survive. There are lots of other interesting things going on with the evolution of fruit, too; animals find fruit really attractive and end up spreading the seeds everywhere, which is to the advantage of any plant that happens to have sprung up in crappy soil.

It's also worthwhile to note that the "lots of flimsy seeds" strategy was originally probably the only reproductive strategy, if you think of "primitive" organisms like bacteria, fungi, or zooplankton. The plants who use that strategy (or their ancestors) were likely the first ones around, and evolutionary pressures have not yet been such that they have had to either develop better ways of protecting / ensuring the survival of their seeds or die.


Posted by Sunsnail on Dec-11-2006 03:50:

quote:
Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles


I get it now. Thanks a bunch


Posted by R!CH on Dec-11-2006 04:26:

reread the chapter on genetic mutation


Posted by Sunsnail on Dec-11-2006 04:27:

quote:
Originally posted by lex400sc
reread the chapter on genetic mutation


Eh, I don't have a book on it. Anyway I'm familiar with all that.

My question was asking why would a mutation that seemingly harms an organism survive.


Posted by miamitrance04 on Dec-11-2006 04:34:

there are more holes in evolutionary theory than swiss cheese not necessarily this particular subject... i just wanted to make a bad joke i guess....


Posted by MrJiveBoJingles on Dec-11-2006 04:42:

And in creationism's case, there is no cheese at all.


Posted by MrJiveBoJingles on Dec-11-2006 04:47:

A more general thing to note is that evolution (mutation plus reproduction plus selection) does not necessarily work toward anything like "perfection." The modern human knee and back, for example, are "poorly made" from the viewpoint of stability, which is why so many problems crop up with them, but they were good enough to "work" (enable the survival of offspring), so they have stuck around to this day.


Posted by astroboy on Dec-11-2006 04:53:

quote:
Originally posted by MrJiveBoJingles
And in creationism's case, there is no cheese at all.


+1


... Creationists spend so much time looking for holes in evolution - the a priori assumption being that if evolution is fatally flawed as a scientific theory, creationism is automatically accepted as the next best hypothesis. This simply isn't the case.


Posted by enferno on Dec-11-2006 05:10:

In the beginning, we were all fish, okay, swimming around in the water. And then one day a couple of fish had a retard baby. And the retard baby was different so it got to live. So retard fish goes on to make more retard babies, and then one day a retard baby fish crawled out of the ocean with its mutant fish hands, and it had butt sex with a squirrel or something, and made this retard-frog-squirrel and then that had a retard baby which was a monkey-fish-frog, and then this monkey-fish-frog had butt sex with that monkey and that monkey had a mutant retard baby that screwed another monkey and that made you. So there you go. You're the retarded offspring of five monkeys having butt sex with a fish-squirrel. Congratulations


Posted by MrJiveBoJingles on Dec-11-2006 05:11:

Why the emphasis on "retards?"

And I don't think any animals reproduce through buttsex.


Posted by R!CH on Dec-11-2006 05:23:

quote:
Originally posted by Sunsnail
Eh, I don't have a book on it. Anyway I'm familiar with all that.

My question was asking why would a mutation that seemingly harms an organism survive.


mutation can occur through radiation, chemical mutagens, viruses or simple copying errors. not all mutations are benefitial and not all are severe enough to filter the genes out of the gene pool. and thus you have some plants that bud better than others


Posted by R!CH on Dec-11-2006 05:26:

quote:
Originally posted by astroboy
+1


... Creationists spend so much time looking for holes in evolution - the a priori assumption being that if evolution is fatally flawed as a scientific theory, creationism is automatically accepted as the next best hypothesis. This imply isn't the case.


evolution is both a FACT and a THEORY. the fact is that every organism on this planet is evolving from a prior genetic state. the theory of evolution postulates that the mechanism for evolution is natural selection. whether or not we are evolving as a result of darwinian natural selection or some other undiscovered mechanism doesn't change the fact that we evolved from more primative beings and that our descendents are also the descendents of the great apes. religious people find objection to this idea because it conflicts with their egomanical view of the world.


Posted by Vlad on Dec-11-2006 05:27:

Re: Anyone familiar with evolution?

quote:
Originally posted by Sunsnail
I'm pretty familiar with it but I have this one question.

In general, plants or animals that can produce offspring the best will pass their dna onto their children, which then become better at producing offspring as well. My question is why do some plants produce seeds that are utter shit at growing? I'm talking about 1 in 100 seeds will grow into a plant. Why does the plant waste so much energy producing seeds which will do nothing? Why hasnt evolution done anything there in terms of seed viability?

(this post is a rant because I can't grow some plants for shit)



For the same reason why women (typically) ovulate every month. For the chance to make something happen.

Think about it, if the body could create babies on its own without the need of sperm to fertilize it, do you think women would still ovulate every month?

Thus the same logic applies to the plant, it "knows" that most wont become anything, thus it produces many in hopes that one will become a plant.


Posted by enferno on Dec-11-2006 05:28:

quote:
Originally posted by lex400sc
mutation can occur through radiation, chemical mutagens, viruses or simple copying errors. not all mutations are benefitial and not all are severe enough to filter the genes out of the gene pool. and thus you have some plants that bud better than others




a mutation is any change of DNA/RNA, positive or negative


Posted by Vlad on Dec-11-2006 05:29:

quote:
Originally posted by enferno
a mutation is any change of DNA/RNA, positive or negative



how about you reply back on msn foo!


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