Chapter IV Natural Selection
How will the struggle for existence, discussed too
briefly in the last chapter, act in regard to variation? Can the principle of
selection, which we have seen is so potent in the hands of man, apply in
nature? I think we shall see that it can act most effectually. Let it be borne
in mind in what an endless number of strange peculiarities our domestic
productions, and, in a lesser degree, those under nature, vary; and how strong
the hereditary tendency is. Under domestication, it may be truly said that the
whole organisation becomes in some degree plastic. Let it be borne in mind how
infinitely complex and close-fitting are the mutual relations of all organic
beings to each other and to their physical conditions of life. Can it, then,
be thought improbable, seeing that variations useful to man have undoubtedly
occurred, that other variations useful in some way to each being in the great
and complex battle of life, should sometimes occur in the course of thousands
of generations? If such do occur, can we doubt (remembering that many more
individuals are born than can possibly survive) that individuals having any
advantage, however slight, over others, would have the best chance of
surviving and of procreating their kind? On the other hand, we may feel sure
that any variation in the least degree injurious would be rigidly destroyed.
This preservation of favourable variations and the rejection of injurious
variations, I call Natural Selection. Variations neither useful nor injurious
would not be affected by natural selection, and would be left a fluctuating
element, as perhaps we see in the species called polymorphic.
2 We shall best understand the probable course of
natural selection by taking the case of a country undergoing some physical
change, for instance, of climate. The proportional numbers of its inhabitants
would almost immediately undergo a change, and some species might become
extinct. We may conclude, from what we have seen of the intimate and complex
manner in which the inhabitants of each country are bound together, that any
change in the numerical proportions of some of the inhabitants, independently
of the change of climate itself, would most seriously affect many of the
others. If the country were open on its borders, new forms would certainly
immigrate, and this also would seriously disturb the relations of some of the
former inhabitants. Let it be remembered how powerful the influence of a
single introduced tree or mammal has been shown to be. But in the case of an
island, or of a country partly surrounded by barriers, into which new and
better adapted forms could not freely enter, we should then have places in the
economy of nature which would assuredly be better filled up, if some of the
original inhabitants were in some manner modified; for, had the area been open
to immigration, these same places would have been seized on by intruders. In
such case, every slight modification, which in the course of ages chanced to
arise, and which in any way favoured the individuals of any of the species, by
better adapting them to their altered conditions, would tend to be preserved;
and natural selection would thus have free scope for the work of improvement.
3 We have reason to believe, as stated in the first
chapter, that a change in the conditions of life, by specially acting on the
reproductive system, causes or increases variability; and in the foregoing
case the conditions of life are supposed to have undergone a change, and this
would manifestly be favourable to natural selection, by giving a better chance
of profitable variations occurring; and unless profitable variations do occur,
natural selection can do nothing. Not that, as I believe, any extreme amount
of variability is necessary; as man can certainly produce great results by
adding up in any given direction mere individual differences, so could Nature,
but far more easily, from having incomparably longer time at her disposal. Nor
do I believe that any great physical change, as of climate, or any unusual
degree of isolation to check immigration, is actually necessary to produce new
and unoccupied places for natural selection to fill up by modifying and
improving some of the varying inhabitants. For as all the inhabitants of each
country are struggling together with nicely balanced forces, extremely slight
modifications in the structure or habits of one inhabitant would often give it
an advantage over others; and still further modifications of the same kind
would often still further increase the advantage. No country can be named in
which all the native inhabitants are now so perfectly adapted to each other
and to the physical conditions under which they live, that none of them could
anyhow be improved; for in all countries, the natives have been so far
conquered by naturalised productions, that they have allowed foreigners to
take firm possession of the land. And as foreigners have thus everywhere
beaten some of the natives, we may safely conclude that the natives might have
been modified with advantage, so as to have better resisted such intruders.
4 As man can produce and certainly has produced a great
result by his methodical and unconscious means of selection, what may not
nature effect? Man can act only on external and visible characters: nature
cares nothing for appearances, except in so far as they may be useful to any
being. She can act on every internal organ, on every shade of constitutional
difference, on the whole machinery of life. Man selects only for his own good;
Nature only for that of the being which she tends. Every selected character is
fully exercised by her; and the being is placed under well-suited conditions
of life. Man keeps the natives of many climates in the same country; he seldom
exercises each selected character in some peculiar and fitting manner; he
feeds a long and a short beaked pigeon on the same food; he does not exercise
a long-backed or long-legged quadruped in any peculiar manner; he exposes
sheep with long and short wool to the same climate. He does not allow the most
vigorous males to struggle for the females. He does not rigidly destroy all
inferior animals, but protects during each varying season, as far as lies in
his power, all his productions. He often begins his selection by some
half-monstrous form; or at least by some modification prominent enough to
catch his eye, or to be plainly useful to him. Under nature, the slightest
difference of structure or constitution may well turn the nicely-balanced
scale in the struggle for life, and so be preserved. How fleeting are the
wishes and efforts of man! how short his time! and consequently how poor will
his products be, compared with those accumulated by nature during whole
geological periods. Can we wonder, then, that nature's productions should be
far 'truer' in character than man's productions; that they should be
infinitely better adapted to the most complex conditions of life, and should
plainly bear the stamp of far higher workmanship?
5 It may be said that natural selection is daily and
hourly scrutinising, throughout the world, every variation, even the
slightest; rejecting that which is bad, preserving and adding up all that is
good; silently and insensibly working, whenever and wherever opportunity
offers, at the improvement of each organic being in relation to its organic
and inorganic conditions of life. We see nothing of these slow changes in
progress, until the hand of time has marked the long lapse of ages, and then
so imperfect is our view into long past geological ages, that we only see that
the forms of life are now different from what they formerly were.
6 Although natural selection can act only through and
for the good of each being, yet characters and structures, which we are apt to
consider as of very trifling importance, may thus be acted on. When we see
leaf-eating insects green, and bark-feeders mottled-grey; the alpine ptarmigan
white in winter, the red-grouse the colour of heather, and the black-grouse
that of peaty earth, we must believe that these tints are of service to these
birds and insects in preserving them from danger. Grouse, if not destroyed at
some period of their lives, would increase in countless numbers; they are
known to suffer largely from birds of prey; and hawks are guided by eyesight
to their prey,--so much so, that on parts of the Continent persons are warned
not to keep white pigeons, as being the most liable to destruction. Hence I
can see no reason to doubt that natural selection might be most effective in
giving the proper colour to each kind of grouse, and in keeping that colour,
when once acquired, true and constant. Nor ought we to think that the
occasional destruction of an animal of any particular colour would produce
little effect: we should remember how essential it is in a flock of white
sheep to destroy every lamb with the faintest trace of black. In plants the
down on the fruit and the colour of the flesh are considered by botanists as
characters of the most trifling importance: yet we hear from an excellent
horticulturist, Downing, that in the United States smooth-skinned fruits
suffer far more from a beetle, a curculio, than those with down; that purple
plums suffer far more from a certain disease than yellow plums; whereas
another disease attacks yellow-fleshed peaches far more than those with other
coloured flesh. If, with all the aids of art, these slight differences make a
great difference in cultivating the several varieties, assuredly, in a state
of nature, where the trees would have to struggle with other trees and with a
host of enemies, such differences would effectually settle which variety,
whether a smooth or downy, a yellow or purple fleshed fruit, should succeed.
7 In looking at many small points of difference between
species, which, as far as our ignorance permits us to judge, seem to be quite
unimportant, we must not forget that climate, food, &c., probably produce
some slight and direct effect. It is, however, far more necessary to bear in
mind that there are many unknown laws of correlation of growth, which, when
one part of the organisation is modified through variation, and the
modifications are accumulated by natural selection for the good of the being,
will cause other modifications, often of the most unexpected nature.
8 As we see that those variations which under
domestication appear at any particular period of life, tend to reappear in the
offspring at the same period;--for instance, in the seeds of the many
varieties of our culinary and agricultural plants; in the caterpillar and
cocoon stages of the varieties of the silkworm; in the eggs of poultry, and in
the colour of the down of their chickens; in the horns of our sheep and cattle
when nearly adult;--so in a state of nature, natural selection will be enabled
to act on and modify organic beings at any age, by the accumulation of
profitable variations at that age, and by their inheritance at a corresponding
age. If it profit a plant to have its seeds more and more widely disseminated
by the wind, I can see no greater difficulty in this being effected through
natural selection, than in the cotton-planter increasing and improving by
selection the down in the pods on his cotton-trees. Natural selection may
modify and adapt the larva of an insect to a score of contingencies, wholly
different from those which concern the mature insect. These modifications will
no doubt affect, through the laws of correlation, the structure of the adult;
and probably in the case of those insects which live only for a few hours, and
which never feed, a large part of their structure is merely the correlated
result of successive changes in the structure of their larvae. So, conversely,
modifications in the adult will probably often affect the structure of the
larva; but in all cases natural selection will ensure that modifications
consequent on other modifications at a different period of life, shall not be
in the least degree injurious: for if they became so, they would cause the
extinction of the species.
9 Natural selection will modify the structure of the
young in relation to the parent, and of the parent in relation to the young.
In social animals it will adapt the structure of each individual for the
benefit of the community; if each in consequence profits by the selected
change. What natural selection cannot do, is to modify the structure of one
species, without giving it any advantage, for the good of another species; and
though statements to this effect may be found in works of natural history, I
cannot find one case which will bear investigation. A structure used only once
in an animal's whole life, if of high importance to it, might be modified to
any extent by natural selection; for instance, the great jaws possessed by
certain insects, and used exclusively for opening the cocoon--or the hard tip
to the beak of nestling birds, used for breaking the egg. It has been
asserted, that of the best short-beaked tumbler-pigeons more perish in the egg
than are able to get out of it; so that fanciers assist in the act of
hatching. Now, if nature had to make the beak of a full-grown pigeon very
short for the bird's own advantage, the process of modification would be very
slow, and there would be simultaneously the most rigorous selection of the
young birds within the egg, which had the most powerful and hardest beaks, for
all with weak beaks would inevitably perish: or, more delicate and more easily
broken shells might be selected, the thickness of the shell being known to
vary like every other structure.
10 Sexual Selection. -- Inasmuch as peculiarities often
appear under domestication in one sex and become hereditarily attached to that
sex, the same fact probably occurs under nature, and if so, natural selection
will be able to modify one sex in its functional relations to the other sex,
or in relation to wholly different habits of life in the two sexes, as is
sometimes the case with insects. And this leads me to say a few words on what
I call Sexual Selection. This depends, not on a struggle for existence, but on
a struggle between the males for possession of the females; the result is not
death to the unsuccessful competitor, but few or no offspring. Sexual
selection is, therefore, less rigorous than natural selection. Generally, the
most vigorous males, those which are best fitted for their places in nature,
will leave most progeny. But in many cases, victory will depend not on general
vigour, but on having special weapons, confined to the male sex. A hornless
stag or spurless cock would have a poor chance of leaving offspring. Sexual
selection by always allowing the victor to breed might surely give indomitable
courage, length to the spur, and strength to the wing to strike in the spurred
leg, as well as the brutal cock-fighter, who knows well that he can improve
his breed by careful selection of the best cocks. How low in the scale of
nature this law of battle descends, I know not; male alligators have been
described as fighting, bellowing, and whirling round, like Indians in a
war-dance, for the possession of the females; male salmons have been seen
fighting all day long; male stag-beetles often bear wounds from the huge
mandibles of other males. The war is, perhaps, severest between the males of
polygamous animals, and these seem oftenest provided with special weapons. The
males of carnivorous animals are already well armed; though to them and to
others, special means of defence may be given through means of sexual
selection, as the mane to the lion, the shoulder-pad to the boar, and the
hooked jaw to the male salmon; for the shield may be as important for victory,
as the sword or spear.
11 Amongst birds, the contest is often of a more
peaceful character. All those who have attended to the subject, believe that
there is the severest rivalry between the males of many species to attract by
singing the females. The rock-thrush of Guiana, birds of Paradise, and some
others, congregate; and successive males display their gorgeous plumage and
perform strange antics before the females, which standing by as spectators, at
last choose the most attractive partner. Those who have closely attended to
birds in confinement well know that they often take individual preferences and
dislikes: thus Sir R. Heron has described how one pied peacock was eminently
attractive to all his hen birds. It may appear childish to attribute any
effect to such apparently weak means: I cannot here enter on the details
necessary to support this view; but if man can in a short time give elegant
carriage and beauty to his bantams, according to his standard of beauty, I can
see no good reason to doubt that female birds, by selecting, during thousands
of generations, the most melodious or beautiful males, according to their
standard of beauty, might produce a marked effect. I strongly suspect that
some well-known laws with respect to the plumage of male and female birds, in
comparison with the plumage of the young, can be explained on the view of
plumage having been chiefly modified by sexual selection, acting when the
birds have come to the breeding age or during the breeding season; the
modifications thus produced being inherited at corresponding ages or seasons,
either by the males alone, or by the males and females; but I have not space
here to enter on this subject.
12 Thus it is, as I believe, that when the males and
females of any animal have the same general habits of life, but differ in
structure, colour, or ornament, such differences have been mainly caused by
sexual selection; that is, individual males have had, in successive
generations, some slight advantage over other males, in their weapons, means
of defence, or charms; and have transmitted these advantages to their male
offspring. Yet, I would not wish to attribute all such sexual differences to
this agency: for we see peculiarities arising and becoming attached to the
male sex in our domestic animals (as the wattle in male carriers, horn-like
protuberances in the cocks of certain fowls, &c.), which we cannot believe
to be either useful to the males in battle, or attractive to the females. We
see analogous cases under nature, for instance, the tuft of hair on the breast
of the turkey-cock, which can hardly be either useful or ornamental to this
bird;--indeed, had the tuft appeared under domestication, it would have been
called a monstrosity.
13 Illustrations of the action of Natural Selection. --
In order to make it clear how, as I believe, natural selection acts, I must
beg permission to give one or two imaginary illustrations. Let us take the
case of a wolf, which preys on various animals, securing some by craft, some
by strength, and some by fleetness; and let us suppose that the fleetest prey,
a deer for instance, had from any change in the country increased in numbers,
or that other prey had decreased in numbers, during that season of the year
when the wolf is hardest pressed for food. I can under such circumstances see
no reason to doubt that the swiftest and slimmest wolves would have the best
chance of surviving, and so be preserved or selected,--provided always that
they retained strength to master their prey at this or at some other period of
the year, when they might be compelled to prey on other animals. I can see no
more reason to doubt this, than that man can improve the fleetness of his
greyhounds by careful and methodical selection, or by that unconscious
selection which results from each man trying to keep the best dogs without any
thought of modifying the breed.
14 Even without any change in the proportional numbers
of the animals on which our wolf preyed, a cub might be born with an innate
tendency to pursue certain kinds of prey. Nor can this be thought very
improbable; for we often observe great differences in the natural tendencies
of our domestic animals; one cat, for instance, taking to catch rats, another
mice; one cat, according to Mr. St. John, bringing home winged game, another
hares or rabbits, and another hunting on marshy ground and almost nightly
catching woodcocks or snipes. The tendency to catch rats rather than mice is
known to be inherited. Now, if any slight innate change of habit or of
structure benefited an individual wolf, it would have the best chance of
surviving and of leaving offspring. Some of its young would probably inherit
the same habits or structure, and by the repetition of this process, a new
variety might be formed which would either supplant or coexist with the
parent-form of wolf. Or, again, the wolves inhabiting a mountainous district,
and those frequenting the lowlands, would naturally be forced to hunt
different prey; and from the continued preservation of the individuals best
fitted for the two sites, two varieties might slowly be formed. These
varieties would cross and blend where they met; but to this subject of
intercrossing we shall soon have to return. I may add, that, according to Mr.
Pierce, there are two varieties of the wolf inhabiting the Catskill Mountains
in the United States, one with a light greyhound-like form, which pursues
deer, and the other more bulky, with shorter legs, which more frequently
attacks the shepherd's flocks.
15 Let us now take a more complex case. Certain plants
excrete a sweet juice, apparently for the sake of eliminating something
injurious from their sap: this is effected by glands at the base of the
stipules in some Leguminosae, and at the back of the leaf of the common
laurel. This juice, though small in quantity, is greedily sought by insects.
Let us now suppose a little sweet juice or nectar to be excreted by the inner
bases of the petals of a flower. In this case insects in seeking the nectar
would get dusted with pollen, and would certainly often transport the pollen
from one flower to the stigma of another flower. The flowers of two distinct
individuals of the same species would thus get crossed; and the act of
crossing, we have good reason to believe (as will hereafter be more fully
alluded to), would produce very vigorous seedlings, which consequently would
have the best chance of flourishing and surviving. Some of these seedlings
would probably inherit the nectar-excreting power. Those individual flowers
which had the largest glands or nectaries, and which excreted most nectar,
would be oftenest visited by insects, and would be oftenest crossed; and so in
the long-run would gain the upper hand. Those flowers, also, which had their
stamens and pistils placed, in relation to the size and habits of the
particular insects which visited them, so as to favour in any degree the
transportal of their pollen from flower to flower, would likewise be favoured
or selected. We might have taken the case of insects visiting flowers for the
sake of collecting pollen instead of nectar; and as pollen is formed for the
sole object of fertilisation, its destruction appears a simple loss to the
plant; yet if a little pollen were carried, at first occasionally and then
habitually, by the pollen-devouring insects from flower to flower, and a cross
thus effected, although nine-tenths of the pollen were destroyed, it might
still be a great gain to the plant; and those individuals which produced more
and more pollen, and had larger and larger anthers, would be selected.
16 When our plant, by this process of the continued
preservation or natural selection of more and more attractive flowers, had
been rendered highly attractive to insects, they would, unintentionally on
their part, regularly carry pollen from flower to flower; and that they can
most effectually do this, I could easily show by many striking instances. I
will give only one--not as a very striking case, but as likewise illustrating
one step in the separation of the sexes of plants, presently to be alluded to.
Some holly-trees bear only male flowers, which have four stamens producing
rather a small quantity of pollen, and a rudimentary pistil; other holly-trees
bear only female flowers; these have a full-sized pistil, and four stamens
with shrivelled anthers, in which not a grain of pollen can be detected.
Having found a female tree exactly sixty yards from a male tree, I put the
stigmas of twenty flowers, taken from different branches, under the
microscope, and on all, without exception, there were pollen-grains, and on
some a profusion of pollen. As the wind had set for several days from the
female to the male tree, the pollen could not thus have been carried. The
weather had been cold and boisterous, and therefore not favourable to bees,
nevertheless every female flower which I examined had been effectually
fertilised by the bees, accidentally dusted with pollen, having flown from
tree to tree in search of nectar. But to return to our imaginary case: as soon
as the plant had been rendered so highly attractive to insects that pollen was
regularly carried from flower to flower, another process might commence. No
naturalist doubts the advantage of what has been called the 'physiological
division of labour;' hence we may believe that it would be advantageous to a
plant to produce stamens alone in one flower or on one whole plant, and
pistils alone in another flower or on another plant. In plants under culture
and placed under new conditions of life, sometimes the male organs and
sometimes the female organs become more or less impotent; now if we suppose
this to occur in ever so slight a degree under nature, then as pollen is
already carried regularly from flower to flower, and as a more complete
separation of the sexes of our plant would be advantageous on the principle of
the division of labour, individuals with this tendency more and more
increased, would be continually favoured or selected, until at last a complete
separation of the sexes would be effected.
17 Let us now turn to the nectar-feeding insects in our
imaginary case: we may suppose the plant of which we have been slowly
increasing the nectar by continued selection, to be a common plant; and that
certain insects depended in main part on its nectar for food. I could give
many facts, showing how anxious bees are to save time; for instance, their
habit of cutting holes and sucking the nectar at the bases of certain flowers,
which they can, with a very little more trouble, enter by the mouth. Bearing
such facts in mind, I can see no reason to doubt that an accidental deviation
in the size and form of the body, or in the curvature and length of the
proboscis, &c., far too slight to be appreciated by us, might profit a bee
or other insect, so that an individual so characterised would be able to
obtain its food more quickly, and so have a better chance of living and
leaving descendants. Its descendants would probably inherit a tendency to a
similar slight deviation of structure. The tubes of the corollas of the common
red and incarnate clovers (Trifolium pratense and incarnatum) do not on a
hasty glance appear to differ in length; yet the hive-bee can easily suck the
nectar out of the incarnate clover, but not out of the common red clover,
which is visited by humble-bees alone; so that whole fields of the red clover
offer in vain an abundant supply of precious nectar to the hive-bee. Thus it
might be a great advantage to the hive-bee to have a slightly longer or
differently constructed proboscis. On the other hand, I have found by
experiment that the fertility of clover greatly depends on bees visiting and
moving parts of the corolla, so as to push the pollen on to the stigmatic
surface. Hence, again, if humble-bees were to become rare in any country, it
might be a great advantage to the red clover to have a shorter or more deeply
divided tube to its corolla, so that the hive-bee could visit its flowers.
Thus I can understand how a flower and a bee might slowly become, either
simultaneously or one after the other, modified and adapted in the most
perfect manner to each other, by the continued preservation of individuals
presenting mutual and slightly favourable deviations of structure.
18 I am well aware that this doctrine of natural
selection, exemplified in the above imaginary instances, is open to the same
objections which were at first urged against Sir Charles Lyell's noble views
on 'the modern changes of the earth, as illustrative of geology;' but we now
very seldom hear the action, for instance, of the coast-waves, called a
trifling and insignificant cause, when applied to the excavation of gigantic
valleys or to the formation of the longest lines of inland cliffs. Natural
selection can act only by the preservation and accumulation of infinitesimally
small inherited modifications, each profitable to the preserved being; and as
modern geology has almost banished such views as the excavation of a great
valley by a single diluvial wave, so will natural selection, if it be a true
principle, banish the belief of the continued creation of new organic beings,
or of any great and sudden modification in their structure.
19 On the Intercrossing of Individuals. -- I must here
introduce a short digression. In the case of animals and plants with separated
sexes, it is of course obvious that two individuals must always unite for each
birth; but in the case of hermaphrodites this is far from obvious.
Nevertheless I am strongly inclined to believe that with all hermaphrodites
two individuals, either occasionally or habitually, concur for the
reproduction of their kind. This view, I may add, was first suggested by
Andrew Knight. We shall presently see its importance; but I must here treat
the subject with extreme brevity, though I have the materials prepared for an
ample discussion. All vertebrate animals, all insects, and some other large
groups of animals, pair for each birth. Modern research has much diminished
the number of supposed hermaphrodites, and of real hermaphrodites a large
number pair; that is, two individuals regularly unite for reproduction, which
is all that concerns us. But still there are many hermaphrodite animals which
certainly do not habitually pair, and a vast majority of plants are
hermaphrodites. What reason, it may be asked, is there for supposing in these
cases that two individuals ever concur in reproduction? As it is impossible
here to enter on details, I must trust to some general considerations alone.
20 In the first place, I have collected so large a body
of facts, showing, in accordance with the almost universal belief of breeders,
that with animals and plants a cross between different varieties, or between
individuals of the same variety but of another strain, gives vigour and
fertility to the offspring; and on the other hand, that close interbreeding
diminishes vigour and fertility; that these facts alone incline me to believe
that it is a general law of nature (utterly ignorant though we be of the
meaning of the law) that no organic being self-fertilises itself for an
eternity of generations; but that a cross with another individual is
occasionally--perhaps at very long intervals--indispensable.
21 On the belief that this is a law of nature, we can, I
think, understand several large classes of facts, such as the following, which
on any other view are inexplicable. Every hybridizer knows how unfavourable
exposure to wet is to the fertilisation of a flower, yet what a multitude of
flowers have their anthers and stigmas fully exposed to the weather! but if an
occasional cross be indispensable, the fullest freedom for the entrance of
pollen from another individual will explain this state of exposure, more
especially as the plant's own anthers and pistil generally stand so close
together that self-fertilisation seems almost inevitable. Many flowers, on the
other hand, have their organs of fructification closely enclosed, as in the
great papilionaceous or pea-family; but in several, perhaps in all, such
flowers, there is a very curious adaptation between the structure of the
flower and the manner in which bees suck the nectar; for, in doing this, they
either push the flower's own pollen on the stigma, or bring pollen from
another flower. So necessary are the visits of bees to papilionaceous flowers,
that I have found, by experiments published elsewhere, that their fertility is
greatly diminished if these visits be prevented. Now, it is scarcely possible
that bees should fly from flower to flower, and not carry pollen from one to
the other, to the great good, as I believe, of the plant. Bees will act like a
camel-hair pencil, and it is quite sufficient just to touch the anthers of one
flower and then the stigma of another with the same brush to ensure
fertilisation; but it must not be supposed that bees would thus produce a
multitude of hybrids between distinct species; for if you bring on the same
brush a plant's own pollen and pollen from another species, the former will
have such a prepotent effect, that it will invariably and completely destroy,
as has been shown by Gartner, any influence from the foreign pollen.
22 When the stamens of a flower suddenly spring towards
the pistil, or slowly move one after the other towards it, the contrivance
seems adapted solely to ensure self-fertilisation; and no doubt it is useful
for this end: but, the agency of insects is often required to cause the
stamens to spring forward, as Kolreuter has shown to be the case with the
barberry; and curiously in this very genus, which seems to have a special
contrivance for self-fertilisation, it is well known that if very
closely-allied forms or varieties are planted near each other, it is hardly
possible to raise pure seedlings, so largely do they naturally cross. In many
other cases, far from there being any aids for self-fertilisation, there are
special contrivances, as I could show from the writings of C. C. Sprengel and
from my own observations, which effectually prevent the stigma receiving
pollen from its own flower: for instance, in Lobelia fulgens, there is a
really beautiful and elaborate contrivance by which every one of the
infinitely numerous pollen-granules are swept out of the conjoined anthers of
each flower, before the stigma of that individual flower is ready to receive
them; and as this flower is never visited, at least in my garden, by insects,
it never sets a seed, though by placing pollen from one flower on the stigma
of another, I raised plenty of seedlings; and whilst another species of
Lobelia growing close by, which is visited by bees, seeds freely. In very many
other cases, though there be no special mechanical contrivance to prevent the
stigma of a flower receiving its own pollen, yet, as C. C. Sprengel has shown,
and as I can confirm, either the anthers burst before the stigma is ready for
fertilisation, or the stigma is ready before the pollen of that flower is
ready, so that these plants have in fact separated sexes, and must habitually
be crossed. How strange are these facts! How strange that the pollen and
stigmatic surface of the same flower, though placed so close together, as if
for the very purpose of self-fertilisation, should in so many cases be
mutually useless to each other! How simply are these facts explained on the
view of an occasional cross with a distinct individual being advantageous or
indispensable!
23 If several varieties of the cabbage, radish, onion,
and of some other plants, be allowed to seed near each other, a large
majority, as I have found, of the seedlings thus raised will turn out
mongrels: for instance, I raised 233 seedling cabbages from some plants of
different varieties growing near each other, and of these only 78 were true to
their kind, and some even of these were not perfectly true. Yet the pistil of
each cabbage-flower is surrounded not only by its own six stamens, but by
those of the many other flowers on the same plant. How, then, comes it that
such a vast number of the seedlings are mongrelized? I suspect that it must
arise from the pollen of a distinct variety having a prepotent effect over a
flower's own pollen; and that this is part of the general law of good being
derived from the intercrossing of distinct individuals of the same species.
When distinct species are crossed the case is directly the reverse, for a
plant's own pollen is always prepotent over foreign pollen; but to this
subject we shall return in a future chapter.
24 In the case of a gigantic tree covered with
innumerable flowers, it may be objected that pollen could seldom be carried
from tree to tree, and at most only from flower to flower on the same tree,
and that flowers on the same tree can be considered as distinct individuals
only in a limited sense. I believe this objection to be valid, but that nature
has largely provided against it by giving to trees a strong tendency to bear
flowers with separated sexes. When the sexes are separated, although the male
and female flowers may be produced on the same tree, we can see that pollen
must be regularly carried from flower to flower; and this will give a better
chance of pollen being occasionally carried from tree to tree. That trees
belonging to all Orders have their sexes more often separated than other
plants, I find to be the case in this country; and at my request Dr. Hooker
tabulated the trees of New Zealand, and Dr. Asa Gray those of the United
States, and the result was as I anticipated. On the other hand, Dr. Hooker has
recently informed me that he finds that the rule does not hold in Australia;
and I have made these few remarks on the sexes of trees simply to call
attention to the subject.
25 Turning for a very brief space to animals: on the
land there are some hermaphrodites, as land-mollusca and earth-worms; but
these all pair. As yet I have not found a single case of a terrestrial animal
which fertilises itself. We can understand this remarkable fact, which offers
so strong a contrast with terrestrial plants, on the view of an occasional
cross being indispensable, by considering the medium in which terrestrial
animals live, and the nature of the fertilising element; for we know of no
means, analogous to the action of insects and of the wind in the case of
plants, by which an occasional cross could be effected with terrestrial
animals without the concurrence of two individuals. Of aquatic animals, there
are many self-fertilising hermaphrodites; but here currents in the water offer
an obvious means for an occasional cross. And, as in the case of flowers, I
have as yet failed, after consultation with one of the highest authorities,
namely, Professor Huxley, to discover a single case of an hermaphrodite animal
with the organs of reproduction so perfectly enclosed within the body, that
access from without and the occasional influence of a distinct individual can
be shown to be physically impossible. Cirripedes long appeared to me to
present a case of very great difficulty under this point of view; but I have
been enabled, by a fortunate chance, elsewhere to prove that two individuals,
though both are self-fertilising hermaphrodites, do sometimes cross.
26 It must have struck most naturalists as a strange
anomaly that, in the case of both animals and plants, species of the same
family and even of the same genus, though agreeing closely with each other in
almost their whole organisation, yet are not rarely, some of them
hermaphrodites, and some of them unisexual. But if, in fact, all
hermaphrodites do occasionally intercross with other individuals, the
difference between hermaphrodites and unisexual species, as far as function is
concerned, becomes very small.
27 From these several considerations and from the many
special facts which I have collected, but which I am not here able to give, I
am strongly inclined to suspect that, both in the vegetable and animal
kingdoms, an occasional intercross with a distinct individual is a law of
nature. I am well aware that there are, on this view, many cases of
difficulty, some of which I am trying to investigate. Finally then, we may
conclude that in many organic beings, a cross between two individuals is an
obvious necessity for each birth; in many others it occurs perhaps only at
long intervals; but in none, as I suspect, can self-fertilisation go on for
perpetuity.
28 Circumstances favourable to Natural Selection. --
This is an extremely intricate subject. A large amount of inheritable and
diversified variability is favourable, but I believe mere individual
differences suffice for the work. A large number of individuals, by giving a
better chance for the appearance within any given period of profitable
variations, will compensate for a lesser amount of variability in each
individual, and is, I believe, an extremely important element of success.
Though nature grants vast periods of time for the work of natural selection,
she does not grant an indefinite period; for as all organic beings are
striving, it may be said, to seize on each place in the economy of nature, if
any one species does not become modified and improved in a corresponding
degree with its competitors, it will soon be exterminated.
29 In man's methodical selection, a breeder selects for
some definite object, and free intercrossing will wholly stop his work. But
when many men, without intending to alter the breed, have a nearly common
standard of perfection, and all try to get and breed from the best animals,
much improvement and modification surely but slowly follow from this
unconscious process of selection, notwithstanding a large amount of crossing
with inferior animals. Thus it will be in nature; for within a confined area,
with some place in its polity not so perfectly occupied as might be, natural
selection will always tend to preserve all the individuals varying in the
right direction, though in different degrees, so as better to fill up the
unoccupied place. But if the area be large, its several districts will almost
certainly present different conditions of life; and then if natural selection
be modifying and improving a species in the several districts, there will be
intercrossing with the other individuals of the same species on the confines
of each. And in this case the effects of intercrossing can hardly be
counterbalanced by natural selection always tending to modify all the
individuals in each district in exactly the same manner to the conditions of
each; for in a continuous area, the conditions will generally graduate away
insensibly from one district to another. The intercrossing will most affect
those animals which unite for each birth, which wander much, and which do not
breed at a very quick rate. Hence in animals of this nature, for instance in
birds, varieties will generally be confined to separated countries; and this I
believe to be the case. In hermaphrodite organisms which cross only
occasionally, and likewise in animals which unite for each birth, but which
wander little and which can increase at a very rapid rate, a new and improved
variety might be quickly formed on any one spot, and might there maintain
itself in a body, so that whatever intercrossing took place would be chiefly
between the individuals of the same new variety. A local variety when once
thus formed might subsequently slowly spread to other districts. On the above
principle, nurserymen always prefer getting seed from a large body of plants
of the same variety, as the chance of intercrossing with other varieties is
thus lessened.
30 Even in the case of slow-breeding animals, which
unite for each birth, we must not overrate the effects of intercrosses in
retarding natural selection; for I can bring a considerable catalogue of
facts, showing that within the same area, varieties of the same animal can
long remain distinct, from haunting different stations, from breeding at
slightly different seasons, or from varieties of the same kind preferring to
pair together.
31 Intercrossing plays a very important part in nature
in keeping the individuals of the same species, or of the same variety, true
and uniform in character. It will obviously thus act far more efficiently with
those animals which unite for each birth; but I have already attempted to show
that we have reason to believe that occasional intercrosses take place with
all animals and with all plants. Even if these take place only at long
intervals, I am convinced that the young thus produced will gain so much in
vigour and fertility over the offspring from long-continued self-fertilisation,
that they will have a better chance of surviving and propagating their kind;
and thus, in the long run, the influence of intercrosses, even at rare
intervals, will be great. If there exist organic beings which never
intercross, uniformity of character can be retained amongst them, as long as
their conditions of life remain the same, only through the principle of
inheritance, and through natural selection destroying any which depart from
the proper type; but if their conditions of life change and they undergo
modification, uniformity of character can be given to their modified
offspring, solely by natural selection preserving the same favourable
variations.
32 Isolation, also, is an important element in the
process of natural selection. In a confined or isolated area, if not very
large, the organic and inorganic conditions of life will generally be in a
great degree uniform; so that natural selection will tend to modify all the
individuals of a varying species throughout the area in the same manner in
relation to the same conditions. Intercrosses, also, with the individuals of
the same species, which otherwise would have inhabited the surrounding and
differently circumstanced districts, will be prevented. But isolation probably
acts more efficiently in checking the immigration of better adapted organisms,
after any physical change, such as of climate or elevation of the land,
&c.; and thus new places in the natural economy of the country are left
open for the old inhabitants to struggle for, and become adapted to, through
modifications in their structure and constitution. Lastly, isolation, by
checking immigration and consequently competition, will give time for any new
variety to be slowly improved; and this may sometimes be of importance in the
production of new species. If, however, an isolated area be very small, either
from being surrounded by barriers, or from having very peculiar physical
conditions, the total number of the individuals supported on it will
necessarily be very small; and fewness of individuals will greatly retard the
production of new species through natural selection, by decreasing the chance
of the appearance of favourable variations.
33 If we turn to nature to test the truth of these
remarks, and look at any small isolated area, such as an oceanic island,
although the total number of the species inhabiting it, will be found to be
small, as we shall see in our chapter on geographical distribution; yet of
these species a very large proportion are endemic,--that is, have been
produced there, and nowhere else. Hence an oceanic island at first sight seems
to have been highly favourable for the production of new species. But we may
thus greatly deceive ourselves, for to ascertain whether a small isolated
area, or a large open area like a continent, has been most favourable for the
production of new organic forms, we ought to make the comparison within equal
times; and this we are incapable of doing.
34 Although I do not doubt that isolation is of
considerable importance in the production of new species, on the whole I am
inclined to believe that largeness of area is of more importance, more
especially in the production of species, which will prove capable of enduring
for a long period, and of spreading widely. Throughout a great and open area,
not only will there be a better chance of favourable variations arising from
the large number of individuals of the same species there supported, but the
conditions of life are infinitely complex from the large number of already
existing species; and if some of these many species become modified and
improved, others will have to be improved in a corresponding degree or they
will be exterminated. Each new form, also, as soon as it has been much
improved, will be able to spread over the open and continuous area, and will
thus come into competition with many others. Hence more new places will be
formed, and the competition to fill them will be more severe, on a large than
on a small and isolated area. Moreover, great areas, though now continuous,
owing to oscillations of level, will often have recently existed in a broken
condition, so that the good effects of isolation will generally, to a certain
extent, have concurred. Finally, I conclude that, although small isolated
areas probably have been in some respects highly favourable for the production
of new species, yet that the course of modification will generally have been
more rapid on large areas; and what is more important, that the new forms
produced on large areas, which already have been victorious over many
competitors, will be those that will spread most widely, will give rise to
most new varieties and species, and will thus play an important part in the
changing history of the organic world.
35 We can, perhaps, on these views, understand some
facts which will be again alluded to in our chapter on geographical
distribution; for instance, that the productions of the smaller continent of
Australia have formerly yielded, and apparently are now yielding, before those
of the larger Europaeo-Asiatic area. Thus, also, it is that continental
productions have everywhere become so largely naturalised on islands. On a
small island, the race for life will have been less severe, and there will
have been less modification and less extermination. Hence, perhaps, it comes
that the flora of Madeira, according to Oswald Heer, resembles the extinct
tertiary flora of Europe. All fresh-water basins, taken together, make a small
area compared with that of the sea or of the land; and, consequently, the
competition between fresh-water productions will have been less severe than
elsewhere; new forms will have been more slowly formed, and old forms more
slowly exterminated. And it is in fresh water that we find seven genera of
Ganoid fishes, remnants of a once preponderant order: and in fresh water we
find some of the most anomalous forms now known in the world, as the
Ornithorhynchus and Lepidosiren, which, like fossils, connect to a certain
extent orders now widely separated in the natural scale. These anomalous forms
may almost be called living fossils; they have endured to the present day,
from having inhabited a confined area, and from having thus been exposed to
less severe competition.
36 To sum up the circumstances favourable and
unfavourable to natural selection, as far as the extreme intricacy of the
subject permits. I conclude, looking to the future, that for terrestrial
productions a large continental area, which will probably undergo many
oscillations of level, and which consequently will exist for long periods in a
broken condition, will be the most favourable for the production of many new
forms of life, likely to endure long and to spread widely. For the area will
first have existed as a continent, and the inhabitants, at this period
numerous in individuals and kinds, will have been subjected to very severe
competition. When converted by subsidence into large separate islands, there
will still exist many individuals of the same species on each island:
intercrossing on the confines of the range of each species will thus be
checked: after physical changes of any kind, immigration will be prevented, so
that new places in the polity of each island will have to be filled up by
modifications of the old inhabitants; and time will be allowed for the
varieties in each to become well modified and perfected. When, by renewed
elevation, the islands shall be re-converted into a continental area, there
will again be severe competition: the most favoured or improved varieties will
be enabled to spread: there will be much extinction of the less improved
forms, and the relative proportional numbers of the various inhabitants of the
renewed continent will again be changed; and again there will be a fair field
for natural selection to improve still further the inhabitants, and thus
produce new species.
37 That natural selection will always act with extreme
slowness, I fully admit. Its action depends on there being places in the
polity of nature, which can be better occupied by some of the inhabitants of
the country undergoing modification of some kind. The existence of such places
will often depend on physical changes, which are generally very slow, and on
the immigration of better adapted forms having been checked. But the action of
natural selection will probably still oftener depend on some of the
inhabitants becoming slowly modified; the mutual relations of many of the
other inhabitants being thus disturbed. Nothing can be effected, unless
favourable variations occur, and variation itself is apparently always a very
slow process. The process will often be greatly retarded by free
intercrossing. Many will exclaim that these several causes are amply
sufficient wholly to stop the action of natural selection. I do not believe
so. On the other hand, I do believe that natural selection will always act
very slowly, often only at long intervals of time, and generally on only a
very few of the inhabitants of the same region at the same time. I further
believe, that this very slow, intermittent action of natural selection accords
perfectly well with what geology tells us of the rate and manner at which the
inhabitants of this world have changed.
38 Slow though the process of selection may be, if
feeble man can do much by his powers of artificial selection, I can see no
limit to the amount of change, to the beauty and infinite complexity of the
coadaptations between all organic beings, one with another and with their
physical conditions of life, which may be effected in the long course of time
by nature's power of selection.
39 Extinction. -- This subject will be more fully
discussed in our chapter on Geology; but it must be here alluded to from being
intimately connected with natural selection. Natural selection acts solely
through the preservation of variations in some way advantageous, which
consequently endure. But as from the high geometrical powers of increase of
all organic beings, each area is already fully stocked with inhabitants, it
follows that as each selected and favoured form increases in number, so will
the less favoured forms decrease and become rare. Rarity, as geology tells us,
is the precursor to extinction. We can, also, see that any form represented by
few individuals will, during fluctuations in the seasons or in the number of
its enemies, run a good chance of utter extinction. But we may go further than
this; for as new forms are continually and slowly being produced, unless we
believe that the number of specific forms goes on perpetually and almost
indefinitely increasing, numbers inevitably must become extinct. That the
number of specific forms has not indefinitely increased, geology shows us
plainly; and indeed we can see reason why they should not have thus increased,
for the number of places in the polity of nature is not indefinitely
great,--not that we have any means of knowing that any one region has as yet
got its maximum of species. Probably no region is as yet fully stocked, for at
the Cape of Good Hope, where more species of plants are crowded together than
in any other quarter of the world, some foreign plants have become naturalised,
without causing, as far as we know, the extinction of any natives.
40 Furthermore, the species which are most numerous in
individuals will have the best chance of producing within any given period
favourable variations. We have evidence of this, in the facts given in the
second chapter, showing that it is the common species which afford the
greatest number of recorded varieties, or incipient species. Hence, rare
species will be less quickly modified or improved within any given period, and
they will consequently be beaten in the race for life by the modified
descendants of the commoner species.
41 From these several considerations I think it
inevitably follows, that as new species in the course of time are formed
through natural selection, others will become rarer and rarer, and finally
extinct. The forms which stand in closest competition with those undergoing
modification and improvement, will naturally suffer most. And we have seen in
the chapter on the Struggle for Existence that it is the most closely-allied
forms,--varieties of the same species, and species of the same genus or of
related genera,--which, from having nearly the same structure, constitution,
and habits, generally come into the severest competition with each other.
Consequently, each new variety or species, during the progress of its
formation, will generally press hardest on its nearest kindred, and tend to
exterminate them. We see the same process of extermination amongst our
domesticated productions, through the selection of improved forms by man. Many
curious instances could be given showing how quickly new breeds of cattle,
sheep, and other animals, and varieties of flowers, take the place of older
and inferior kinds. In Yorkshire, it is historically known that the ancient
black cattle were displaced by the long-horns, and that these 'were swept away
by the short-horns' (I quote the words of an agricultural writer) 'as if by
some murderous pestilence.'
42 Divergence of Character. -- The principle, which I
have designated by this term, is of high importance on my theory, and
explains, as I believe, several important facts. In the first place,
varieties, even strongly-marked ones, though having somewhat of the character
of species--as is shown by the hopeless doubts in many cases how to rank
them--yet certainly differ from each other far less than do good and distinct
species. Nevertheless, according to my view, varieties are species in the
process of formation, or are, as I have called them, incipient species. How,
then, does the lesser difference between varieties become augmented into the
greater difference between species? That this does habitually happen, we must
infer from most of the innumerable species throughout nature presenting
well-marked differences; whereas varieties, the supposed prototypes and
parents of future well-marked species, present slight and ill-defined
differences. Mere chance, as we may call it, might cause one variety to differ
in some character from its parents, and the offspring of this variety again to
differ from its parent in the very same character and in a greater degree; but
this alone would never account for so habitual and large an amount of
difference as that between varieties of the same species and species of the
same genus.
43 As has always been my practice, let us seek light on
this head from our domestic productions. We shall here find something
analogous. A fancier is struck by a pigeon having a slightly shorter beak;
another fancier is struck by a pigeon having a rather longer beak; and on the
acknowledged principle that 'fanciers do not and will not admire a medium
standard, but like extremes,' they both go on (as has actually occurred with
tumbler-pigeons) choosing and breeding from birds with longer and longer
beaks, or with shorter and shorter beaks. Again, we may suppose that at an
early period one man preferred swifter horses; another stronger and more bulky
horses. The early differences would be very slight; in the course of time,
from the continued selection of swifter horses by some breeders, and of
stronger ones by others, the differences would become greater, and would be
noted as forming two sub-breeds; finally, after the lapse of centuries, the
sub-breeds would become converted into two well-established and distinct
breeds. As the differences slowly become greater, the inferior animals with
intermediate characters, being neither very swift nor very strong, will have
been neglected, and will have tended to disappear. Here, then, we see in man's
productions the action of what may be called the principle of divergence,
causing differences, at first barely appreciable, steadily to increase, and
the breeds to diverge in character both from each other and from their common
parent.
44 But how, it may be asked, can any analogous principle
apply in nature? I believe it can and does apply most efficiently, from the
simple circumstance that the more diversified the descendants from any one
species become in structure, constitution, and habits, by so much will they be
better enabled to seize on many and widely diversified places in the polity of
nature, and so be enabled to increase in numbers.
45 We can clearly see this in the case of animals with
simple habits. Take the case of a carnivorous quadruped, of which the number
that can be supported in any country has long ago arrived at its full average.
If its natural powers of increase be allowed to act, it can succeed in
increasing (the country not undergoing any change in its conditions) only by
its varying descendants seizing on places at present occupied by other
animals: some of them, for instance, being enabled to feed on new kinds of
prey, either dead or alive; some inhabiting new stations, climbing trees,
frequenting water, and some perhaps becoming less carnivorous. The more
diversified in habits and structure the descendants of our carnivorous animal
became, the more places they would be enabled to occupy. What applies to one
animal will apply throughout all time to all animals--that is, if they
vary--for otherwise natural selection can do nothing. So it will be with
plants. It has been experimentally proved, that if a plot of ground be sown
with several distinct genera of grasses, a greater number of plants and a
greater weight of dry herbage can thus be raised. The same has been found to
hold good when first one variety and then several mixed varieties of wheat
have been sown on equal spaces of ground. Hence, if any one species of grass
were to go on varying, and those varieties were continually selected which
differed from each other in at all the same manner as distinct species and
genera of grasses differ from each other, a greater number of individual
plants of this species of grass, including its modified descendants, would
succeed in living on the same piece of ground. And we well know that each
species and each variety of grass is annually sowing almost countless seeds;
and thus, as it may be said, is striving its utmost to increase its numbers.
Consequently, I cannot doubt that in the course of many thousands of
generations, the most distinct varieties of any one species of grass would
always have the best chance of succeeding and of increasing in numbers, and
thus of supplanting the less distinct varieties; and varieties, when rendered
very distinct from each other, take the rank of species.
46 The truth of the principle, that the greatest amount
of life can be supported by great diversification of structure, is seen under
many natural circumstances. In an extremely small area, especially if freely
open to immigration, and where the contest between individual and individual
must be severe, we always find great diversity in its inhabitants. For
instance, I found that a piece of turf, three feet by four in size, which had
been exposed for many years to exactly the same conditions, supported twenty
species of plants, and these belonged to eighteen genera and to eight orders,
which shows how much these plants differed from each other. So it is with the
plants and insects on small and uniform islets; and so in small ponds of fresh
water. Farmers find that they can raise most food by a rotation of plants
belonging to the most different orders: nature follows what may be called a
simultaneous rotation. Most of the animals and plants which live close round
any small piece of ground, could live on it (supposing it not to be in any way
peculiar in its nature), and may be said to be striving to the utmost to live
there; but, it is seen, that where they come into the closest competition with
each other, the advantages of diversification of structure, with the
accompanying differences of habit and constitution, determine that the
inhabitants, which thus jostle each other most closely, shall, as a general
rule, belong to what we call different genera and orders.
47 The same principle is seen in the naturalisation of
plants through man's agency in foreign lands. It might have been expected that
the plants which have succeeded in becoming naturalised in any land would
generally have been closely allied to the indigenes; for these are commonly
looked at as specially created and adapted for their own country. It might,
also, perhaps have been expected that naturalised plants would have belonged
to a few groups more especially adapted to certain stations in their new
homes. But the case is very different; and Alph. De Candolle has well remarked
in his great and admirable work, that floras gain by naturalisation,
proportionally with the number of the native genera and species, far more in
new genera than in new species. To give a single instance: in the last edition
of Dr. Asa Gray's 'Manual of the Flora of the Northern United States,' 260
naturalised plants are enumerated, and these belong to 162 genera. We thus see
that these naturalised plants are of a highly diversified nature. They differ,
moreover, to a large extent from the indigenes, for out of the 162 genera, no
less than 100 genera are not there indigenous, and thus a large proportional
addition is made to the genera of these States.
48 By considering the nature of the plants or animals
which have struggled successfully with the indigenes of any country, and have
there become naturalised, we can gain some crude idea in what manner some of
the natives would have had to be modified, in order to have gained an
advantage over the other natives; and we may, I think, at least safely infer
that diversification of structure, amounting to new generic differences, would
have been profitable to them.
49 The advantage of diversification in the inhabitants
of the same region is, in fact, the same as that of the physiological division
of labour in the organs of the same individual body--a subject so well
elucidated by Milne Edwards. No physiologist doubts that a stomach by being
adapted to digest vegetable matter alone, or flesh alone, draws most nutriment
from these substances. So in the general economy of any land, the more widely
and perfectly the animals and plants are diversified for different habits of
life, so will a greater number of individuals be capable of there supporting
themselves. A set of animals, with their organisation but little diversified,
could hardly compete with a set more perfectly diversified in structure. It
may be doubted, for instance, whether the Australian marsupials, which are
divided into groups differing but little from each other, and feebly
representing, as Mr. Waterhouse and others have remarked, our carnivorous,
ruminant, and rodent mammals, could successfully compete with these
well-pronounced orders. In the Australian mammals, we see the process of
diversification in an early and incomplete stage of development.
50 After the foregoing discussion, which ought to have
been much amplified, we may, I think, assume that the modified descendants of
any one species will succeed by so much the better as they become more
diversified in structure, and are thus enabled to encroach on places occupied
by other beings. Now let us see how this principle of great benefit being
derived from divergence of character, combined with the principles of natural
selection and of extinction, will tend to act.
51 The accompanying diagram will aid us in understanding
this rather perplexing subject. Let A to L represent the species of a genus
large in its own country; these species are supposed to resemble each other in
unequal degrees, as is so generally the case in nature, and as is represented
in the diagram by the letters standing at unequal distances. I have said a
large genus, because we have seen in the second chapter, that on an average
more of the species of large genera vary than of small genera; and the varying
species of the large genera present a greater number of varieties. We have,
also, seen that the species, which are the commonest and the most
widely-diffused, vary more than rare species with restricted ranges. Let (A)
be a common, widely-diffused, and varying species, belonging to a genus large
in its own country. The little fan of diverging dotted lines of unequal
lengths proceeding from (A), may represent its varying offspring. The
variations are supposed to be extremely slight, but of the most diversified
nature; they are not supposed all to appear simultaneously, but often after
long intervals of time; nor are they all supposed to endure for equal periods.
Only those variations which are in some way profitable will be preserved or
naturally selected. And here the importance of the principle of benefit being
derived from divergence of character comes in; for this will generally lead to
the most different or divergent variations (represented by the outer dotted
lines) being preserved and accumulated by natural selection. When a dotted
line reaches one of the horizontal lines, and is there marked by a small
numbered letter, a sufficient amount of variation is supposed to have been
accumulated to have formed a fairly well-marked variety, such as would be
thought worthy of record in a systematic work.
52 The intervals between the horizontal lines in the
diagram, may represent each a thousand generations; but it would have been
better if each had represented ten thousand generations. After a thousand
generations, species (A) is supposed to have produced two fairly well-marked
varieties, namely a1 and m1. These two varieties will generally continue to be
exposed to the same conditions which made their parents variable, and the
tendency to variability is in itself hereditary, consequently they will tend
to vary, and generally to vary in nearly the same manner as their parents
varied. Moreover, these two varieties, being only slightly modified forms,
will tend to inherit those advantages which made their common parent (A) more
numerous than most of the other inhabitants of the same country; they will
likewise partake of those more general advantages which made the genus to
which the parent-species belonged, a large genus in its own country. And these
circumstances we know to be favourable to the production of new varieties.
53 If, then, these two varieties be variable, the most
divergent of their variations will generally be preserved during the next
thousand generations. And after this interval, variety a1 is supposed in the
diagram to have produced variety a2, which will, owing to the principle of
divergence, differ more from (A) than did variety a1. Variety m1 is supposed
to have produced two varieties, namely m2 and s2, differing from each other,
and more considerably from their common parent (A). We may continue the
process by similar steps for any length of time; some of the varieties, after
each thousand generations, producing only a single variety, but in a more and
more modified condition, some producing two or three varieties, and some
failing to produce any. Thus the varieties or modified descendants, proceeding
from the common parent (A), will generally go on increasing in number and
diverging in character. In the diagram the process is represented up to the
ten-thousandth generation, and under a condensed and simplified form up to the
fourteen-thousandth generation.
54 But I must here remark that I do not suppose that the
process ever goes on so regularly as is represented in the diagram, though in
itself made somewhat irregular. I am far from thinking that the most divergent
varieties will invariably prevail and multiply: a medium form may often long
endure, and may or may not produce more than one modified descendant; for
natural selection will always act according to the nature of the places which
are either unoccupied or not perfectly occupied by other beings; and this will
depend on infinitely complex relations. But as a general rule, the more
diversified in structure the descendants from any one species can be rendered,
the more places they will be enabled to seize on, and the more their modified
progeny will be increased. In our diagram the line of succession is broken at
regular intervals by small numbered letters marking the successive forms which
have become sufficiently distinct to be recorded as varieties. But these
breaks are imaginary, and might have been inserted anywhere, after intervals
long enough to have allowed the accumulation of a considerable amount of
divergent variation.
55 As all the modified descendants from a common and
widely-diffused species, belonging to a large genus, will tend to partake of
the same advantages which made their parent successful in life, they will
generally go on multiplying in number as well as diverging in character: this
is represented in the diagram by the several divergent branches proceeding
from (A). The modified offspring from the later and more highly improved
branches in the lines of descent, will, it is probable, often take the place
of, and so destroy, the earlier and less improved branches: this is
represented in the diagram by some of the lower branches not reaching to the
upper horizontal lines. In some cases I do not doubt that the process of
modification will be confined to a single line of descent, and the number of
the descendants will not be increased; although the amount of divergent
modification may have been increased in the successive generations. This case
would be represented in the diagram, if all the lines proceeding from (A) were
removed, excepting that from a1 to a10. In the same way, for instance, the
English race-horse and English pointer have apparently both gone on slowly
diverging in character from their original stocks, without either having given
off any fresh branches or races.
56 After ten thousand generations, species (A) is
supposed to have produced three forms, a10, f10, and m10, which, from having
diverged in character during the successive generations, will have come to
differ largely, but perhaps unequally, from each other and from their common
parent. If we suppose the amount of change between each horizontal line in our
diagram to be excessively small, these three forms may still be only
well-marked varieties; or they may have arrived at the doubtful category of
sub-species; but we have only to suppose the steps in the process of
modification to be more numerous or greater in amount, to convert these three
forms into well-defined species: thus the diagram illustrates the steps by
which the small differences distinguishing varieties are increased into the
larger differences distinguishing species. By continuing the same process for
a greater number of generations (as shown in the diagram in a condensed and
simplified manner), we get eight species, marked by the letters between a14
and m14, all descended from (A). Thus, as I believe, species are multiplied
and genera are formed.
57 In a large genus it is probable that more than one
species would vary. In the diagram I have assumed that a second species (I)
has produced, by analogous steps, after ten thousand generations, either two
well-marked varieties (w10 and z10) or two species, according to the amount of
change supposed to be represented between the horizontal lines. After fourteen
thousand generations, six new species, marked by the letters n14 to z14, are
supposed to have been produced. In each genus, the species, which are already
extremely different in character, will generally tend to produce the greatest
number of modified descendants; for these will have the best chance of filling
new and widely different places in the polity of nature: hence in the diagram
I have chosen the extreme species (A), and the nearly extreme species (I), as
those which have largely varied, and have given rise to new varieties and
species. The other nine species (marked by capital letters) of our original
genus, may for a long period continue transmitting unaltered descendants; and
this is shown in the diagram by the dotted lines not prolonged far upwards
from want of space.
58 But during the process of modification, represented
in the diagram, another of our principles, namely that of extinction, will
have played an important part. As in each fully stocked country natural
selection necessarily acts by the selected form having some advantage in the
struggle for life over other forms, there will be a constant tendency in the
improved descendants of any one species to supplant and exterminate in each
stage of descent their predecessors and their original parent. For it should
be remembered that the competition will generally be most severe between those
forms which are most nearly related to each other in habits, constitution, and
structure. Hence all the intermediate forms between the earlier and later
states, that is between the less and more improved state of a species, as well
as the original parent-species itself, will generally tend to become extinct.
So it probably will be with many whole collateral lines of descent, which will
be conquered by later and improved lines of descent. If, however, the modified
offspring of a species get into some distinct country, or become quickly
adapted to some quite new station, in which child and parent do not come into
competition, both may continue to exist.
59 If then our diagram be assumed to represent a
considerable amount of modification, species (A) and all the earlier varieties
will have become extinct, having been replaced by eight new species (a14 to
m14); and (I) will have been replaced by six (n14 to z14) new species.
60 But we may go further than this. The original species
of our genus were supposed to resemble each other in unequal degrees, as is so
generally the case in nature; species (A) being more nearly related to B, C,
and D, than to the other species; and species (I) more to G, H, K, L, than to
the others. These two species (A) and (I), were also supposed to be very
common and widely diffused species, so that they must originally have had some
advantage over most of the other species of the genus. Their modified
descendants, fourteen in number at the fourteen-thousandth generation, will
probably have inherited some of the same advantages: they have also been
modified and improved in a diversified manner at each stage of descent, so as
to have become adapted to many related places in the natural economy of their
country. It seems, therefore, to me extremely probable that they will have
taken the places of, and thus exterminated, not only their parents (A) and
(I), but likewise some of the original species which were most nearly related
to their parents. Hence very few of the original species will have transmitted
offspring to the fourteen-thousandth generation. We may suppose that only one
(F), of the two species which were least closely related to the other nine
original species, has transmitted descendants to this late stage of descent.
61 The new species in our diagram descended from the
original eleven species, will now be fifteen in number. Owing to the divergent
tendency of natural selection, the extreme amount of difference in character
between species a14 and z14 will be much greater than that between the most
different of the original eleven species. The new species, moreover, will be
allied to each other in a widely different manner. Of the eight descendants
from (A) the three marked a14, q14, p14, will be nearly related from having
recently branched off from a10; b14 and f14, from having diverged at an
earlier period from a5, will be in some degree distinct from the three
first-named species; and lastly, o14, e14, and m14, will be nearly related one
to the other, but from having diverged at the first commencement of the
process of modification, will be widely different from the other five species,
and may constitute a sub-genus or even a distinct genus.
62 The six descendants from (I) will form two sub-genera
or even genera. But as the original species (I) differed largely from (A),
standing nearly at the extreme points of the original genus, the six
descendants from (I) will, owing to inheritance, differ considerably from the
eight descendants from (A); the two groups, moreover, are supposed to have
gone on diverging in different directions. The intermediate species, also (and
this is a very important consideration), which connected the original species
(A) and (I), have all become, excepting (F), extinct, and have left no
descendants. Hence the six new species descended from (I), and the eight
descended from (A), will have to be ranked as very distinct genera, or even as
distinct sub-families.
63 Thus it is, as I believe, that two or more genera are
produced by descent, with modification, from two or more species of the same
genus. And the two or more parent-species are supposed to have descended from
some one species of an earlier genus. In our diagram, this is indicated by the
broken lines, beneath the capital letters, converging in sub-branches
downwards towards a single point; this point representing a single species,
the supposed single parent of our several new sub-genera and genera.
64 It is worth while to reflect for a moment on the
character of the new species F14, which is supposed not to have diverged much
in character, but to have retained the form of (F), either unaltered or
altered only in a slight degree. In this case, its affinities to the other
fourteen new species will be of a curious and circuitous nature. Having
descended from a form which stood between the two parent-species (A) and (I),
now supposed to be extinct and unknown, it will be in some degree intermediate
in character between the two groups descended from these species. But as these
two groups have gone on diverging in character from the type of their parents,
the new species (F14) will not be directly intermediate between them, but
rather between types of the two groups; and every naturalist will be able to
bring some such case before his mind.
65 In the diagram, each horizontal line has hitherto
been supposed to represent a thousand generations, but each may represent a
million or hundred million generations, and likewise a section of the
successive strata of the earth's crust including extinct remains. We shall,
when we come to our chapter on Geology, have to refer again to this subject,
and I think we shall then see that the diagram throws light on the affinities
of extinct beings, which, though generally belonging to the same orders, or
families, or genera, with those now living, yet are often, in some degree,
intermediate in character between existing groups; and we can understand this
fact, for the extinct species lived at very ancient epochs when the branching
lines of descent had diverged less.
66 I see no reason to limit the process of modification,
as now explained, to the formation of genera alone. If, in our diagram, we
suppose the amount of change represented by each successive group of diverging
dotted lines to be very great, the forms marked a14 to p14, those marked b14
and f14, and those marked o14 to m14, will form three very distinct genera. We
shall also have two very distinct genera descended from (I) and as these
latter two genera, both from continued divergence of character and from
inheritance from a different parent, will differ widely from the three genera
descended from (A), the two little groups of genera will form two distinct
families, or even orders, according to the amount of divergent modification
supposed to be represented in the diagram. And the two new families, or
orders, will have descended from two species of the original genus; and these
two species are supposed to have descended from one species of a still more
ancient and unknown genus.
67 We have seen that in each country it is the species
of the larger genera which oftenest present varieties or incipient species.
This, indeed, might have been expected; for as natural selection acts through
one form having some advantage over other forms in the struggle for existence,
it will chiefly act on those which already have some advantage; and the
largeness of any group shows that its species have inherited from a common
ancestor some advantage in common. Hence, the struggle for the production of
new and modified descendants, will mainly lie between the larger groups, which
are all trying to increase in number. One large group will slowly conquer
another large group, reduce its numbers, and thus lessen its chance of further
variation and improvement. Within the same large group, the later and more
highly perfected sub-groups, from branching out and seizing on many new places
in the polity of Nature, will constantly tend to supplant and destroy the
earlier and less improved sub-groups. Small and broken groups and sub-groups
will finally tend to disappear. Looking to the future, we can predict that the
groups of organic beings which are now large and triumphant, and which are
least broken up, that is, which as yet have suffered least extinction, will
for a long period continue to increase. But which groups will ultimately
prevail, no man can predict; for we well know that many groups, formerly most
extensively developed, have now become extinct. Looking still more remotely to
the future, we may predict that, owing to the continued and steady increase of
the larger groups, a multitude of smaller groups will become utterly extinct,
and leave no modified descendants; and consequently that of the species living
at any one period, extremely few will transmit descendants to a remote
futurity. I shall have to return to this subject in the chapter on
Classification, but I may add that on this view of extremely few of the more
ancient species having transmitted descendants, and on the view of all the
descendants of the same species making a class, we can understand how it is
that there exist but very few classes in each main division of the animal and
vegetable kingdoms. Although extremely few of the most ancient species may now
have living and modified descendants, yet at the most remote geological
period, the earth may have been as well peopled with many species of many
genera, families, orders, and classes, as at the present day.
68 Summary of Chapter -- If during the long course of
ages and under varying conditions of life, organic beings vary at all in the
several parts of their organisation, and I think this cannot be disputed; if
there be, owing to the high geometrical powers of increase of each species, at
some age, season, or year, a severe struggle for life, and this certainly
cannot be disputed; then, considering the infinite complexity of the relations
of all organic beings to each other and to their conditions of existence,
causing an infinite diversity in structure, constitution, and habits, to be
advantageous to them, I think it would be a most extraordinary fact if no
variation ever had occurred useful to each being's own welfare, in the same
way as so many variations have occurred useful to man. But if variations
useful to any organic being do occur, assuredly individuals thus characterised
will have the best chance of being preserved in the struggle for life; and
from the strong principle of inheritance they will tend to produce offspring
similarly characterised. This principle of preservation, I have called, for
the sake of brevity, Natural Selection. Natural selection, on the principle of
qualities being inherited at corresponding ages, can modify the egg, seed, or
young, as easily as the adult. Amongst many animals, sexual selection will
give its aid to ordinary selection, by assuring to the most vigorous and best
adapted males the greatest number of offspring. Sexual selection will also
give characters useful to the males alone, in their struggles with other
males.
69 Whether natural selection has really thus acted in
nature, in modifying and adapting the various forms of life to their several
conditions and stations, must be judged of by the general tenour and balance
of evidence given in the following chapters. But we already see how it entails
extinction; and how largely extinction has acted in the world's history,
geology plainly declares. Natural selection, also, leads to divergence of
character; for more living beings can be supported on the same area the more
they diverge in structure, habits, and constitution, of which we see proof by
looking at the inhabitants of any small spot or at naturalised productions.
Therefore during the modification of the descendants of any one species, and
during the incessant struggle of all species to increase in numbers, the more
diversified these descendants become, the better will be their chance of
succeeding in the battle of life. Thus the small differences distinguishing
varieties of the same species, will steadily tend to increase till they come
to equal the greater differences between species of the same genus, or even of
distinct genera.
70 We have seen that it is the common, the
widely-diffused, and widely-ranging species, belonging to the larger genera,
which vary most; and these will tend to transmit to their modified offspring
that superiority which now makes them dominant in their own countries. Natural
selection, as has just been remarked, leads to divergence of character and to
much extinction of the less improved and intermediate forms of life. On these
principles, I believe, the nature of the affinities of all organic beings may
be explained. It is a truly wonderful fact--the wonder of which we are apt to
overlook from familiarity--that all animals and all plants throughout all time
and space should be related to each other in group subordinate to group, in
the manner which we everywhere behold--namely, varieties of the same species
most closely related together, species of the same genus less closely and
unequally related together, forming sections and sub-genera, species of
distinct genera much less closely related, and genera related in different
degrees, forming sub-families, families, orders, sub-classes, and classes. The
several subordinate groups in any class cannot be ranked in a single file, but
seem rather to be clustered round points, and these round other points, and so
on in almost endless cycles. On the view that each species has been
independently created, I can see no explanation of this great fact in the
classification of all organic beings; but, to the best of my judgment, it is
explained through inheritance and the complex action of natural selection,
entailing extinction and divergence of character, as we have seen illustrated
in the diagram.
71 The affinities of all the beings of the same class
have sometimes been represented by a great tree. I believe this simile largely
speaks the truth. The green and budding twigs may represent existing species;
and those produced during each former year may represent the long succession
of extinct species. At each period of growth all the growing twigs have tried
to branch out on all sides, and to overtop and kill the surrounding twigs and
branches, in the same manner as species and groups of species have tried to
overmaster other species in the great battle for life. The limbs divided into
great branches, and these into lesser and lesser branches, were themselves
once, when the tree was small, budding twigs; and this connexion of the former
and present buds by ramifying branches may well represent the classification
of all extinct and living species in groups subordinate to groups. Of the many
twigs which flourished when the tree was a mere bush, only two or three, now
grown into great branches, yet survive and bear all the other branches; so
with the species which lived during long-past geological periods, very few now
have living and modified descendants. From the first growth of the tree, many
a limb and branch has decayed and dropped off; and these lost branches of
various sizes may represent those whole orders, families, and genera which
have now no living representatives, and which are known to us only from having
been found in a fossil state. As we here and there see a thin straggling
branch springing from a fork low down in a tree, and which by some chance has
been favoured and is still alive on its summit, so we occasionally see an
animal like the Ornithorhynchus or Lepidosiren, which in some small degree
connects by its affinities two large branches of life, and which has
apparently been saved from fatal competition by having inhabited a protected
station. As buds give rise by growth to fresh buds, and these, if vigorous,
branch out and overtop on all sides many a feebler branch, so by generation I
believe it has been with the great Tree of Life, which fills with its dead and
broken branches the crust of the earth, and covers the surface with its ever
branching and beautiful ramifications.