Back to Biology for a bit:
Do you ever wonder why two very different kinds
of species share a common trait? Why do birds and bats both have wings if bats
are mammals? Whenever two organisms
share the same characteristic there are two possible pathways to explain it.
They are "divergent evolution" and "convergent evolution.”
The word divergent means spreading
out or radiating from a common point. Divergent evolution then is where a
common ancestor gives rise to a number of species that share some of the same
traits. For example, humans have hair and mice have hair. Somewhere in our
ancestry there was an animal that had hair which gave rise to both lines. That
does not mean we came from mice, but rather there was a common ancestor that
had hair and from that animal sprung the lines of many of the creatures that
have hair.
The word convergent means
approaching the same point from different directions. So convergent evolution
is where two unrelated organisms independently evolve the same trait. A good example of this would be fins. Both
whales and fish have fins, and yet whales evolved from land animals that walked
on legs. When the marine mammals took to water the legs eventually evolved into
structures that look very much like the fins of fish. It is not that a common
ancestor with fins gave rise to both whales and fish. They both have fins
because in the environment where they live (water) fins are an advantage over
other kinds of appendages.
I think one of the most interesting examples of convergent evolution is the case of electric organs in fish. Organs that
produce electricity have evolved no less than six separate times in completely different groups of fish. In the bony fish, most are freshwater species: the
knifefish of South America, the family Gymnotidae (which includes the electric
eel), the electric catfish of Africa, and the elephantfish. In the
cartilaginous fish electric organs have evolved in the torpedo rays, family
Torpedinidae, and the stargazers (saltwater).
Electric organs originally evolved, not as
a defense mechanism, but as a sensory device.
Most places where we find electric fish are in murky rivers and streams
where visibility is very limited. In the course of evolution, some fish in
these waters developed muscles that were modified enough so that they could
produce a weak electromagnetic field outside of their body. Some of these fish
discovered a way to read this field to "see" through the murky water.
All of the groups of the electric fish probably started out like this.
Some of these fish then went a step
further. The electric organs gradually got larger and larger and eventually
reached the point that they could stun or even kill prey. The grand champion of
electric fish is the electric eel (Electrophorus electricus). This fish
lives in the Amazon. Electric eels can generate up to 600 volts. The electric
organs make up 80% of this fish's body. Ironically, electric eels have evolved
their electric organs to such a point that they can no longer generate the
steady weak field needed for sensory use.
I live in the Pacific Northwest, and we do
have an electric fish off our coastline. It is the Pacific Electric Ray Torpedo
californica. This member of the torpedo genus ranges from British Columbia
to Baja California (note: electric rays should not be confused with Stingrays.
Stingrays have a barbed tail with a "stinging" venom and are not
electric). The Pacific electric ray can deliver over 200 volts and have been
known to stun divers. They have a circular body with a large tail. As with other electric fish, the electric
organs consist of muscle that is layered in plates like a battery. They live in relatively
shallow water and feed on fish such as herring and halibut. (The naval weapon
“torpedo” was named after these fish, not the other way around.)
When a trait evolves separately five
times, that tells us that it must be a rather successful trait and one that is
not insurmountable to attain. A simple change in muscle development produced a
new sensory organ. If it is so successful, why are there no land animals with
electric organs? Probably because an
electric field can be generated much more easily in water than in air. Sorry
Magneto, your powers fall in the realm of superhero fantasy.
References: The
Audubon Society Field Guide to
North American Fishes, Whales
and Dolphins, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.,
New York, 1983.
Star Liner
Dang it's interesting, a break from all the coding
ReplyDelete