Friday, June 26, 2026

Darwinism and Neo-Darwinism

 


Darwinism and Neo-Darwinism

Introduction

The theory of evolution explains how present-day organisms have arisen from pre-existing organisms through gradual changes over millions of years. One of the most important scientific theories explaining this process was proposed by Charles Darwin, known as Darwinism or the Theory of Natural Selection.

Later, Darwin's ideas were combined with Gregor Mendel's laws of inheritance and modern genetics to form the Modern Synthetic Theory of Evolution (Neo-Darwinism).

Evolution: Definition

Evolution is the gradual, heritable change in populations over successive generations that leads to the formation of new species and biological diversity.

Modern Definition

Evolution is a change in the frequency of alleles (genes) in a population over generations.

Historical Background of Darwinism

Charles Darwin

  • Born: 1809
  • Nationality: English
  • Profession: Naturalist

Voyage of HMS Beagle (1831–1836)

Darwin travelled around the world aboard the research ship HMS Beagle. During this five-year voyage, he collected plants, animals, fossils, and geological observations that led him to formulate the theory of evolution.

Publication of Darwin's Theory

In 1859, Darwin published his famous book: On the Origin of Species, its complete title is:

On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection.

This book revolutionized biology by proposing that species evolve through natural selection.

Observations That Led Darwin to His Theory

Darwin observed the following during his voyage:

1. Variation

Individuals within the same species differ from one another.

Example:

  • Humans differ in height, skin color, and facial features.
  • Birds differ in beak size and wing length.

2. Overproduction

Organisms produce far more offspring than can survive. Examples:

  • A fish lays thousands of eggs.
  • A frog produces hundreds of eggs.
  • Many plants produce thousands of seeds.

If all offspring survived, Earth's resources would be exhausted.

3. Limited Resources

Food, shelter, water, and space are limited. This creates competition among organisms.

4. Adaptation

Some individuals possess characteristics that help them survive better in a particular environment. These favorable characteristics are called adaptations.

Darwinism (Theory of Natural Selection)

Definition

Darwinism states that:

Organisms possessing favorable heritable variations survive and reproduce more successfully than others. Over many generations, these favorable variations accumulate, leading to the evolution of new species.

Natural selection is therefore the main driving force of evolution.

Main Postulates of Darwinism

1. Overproduction (Prodigality of Reproduction)

Every species has the capacity to produce many more offspring than can survive.

Examples

Organism

Number of Offspring

Fish

Thousands of eggs

Frog

Hundreds to thousands of eggs

Oyster

Millions of eggs

Plants

Thousands of seeds

Since resources are limited, not all offspring survive.

2. Struggle for Existence

Because resources are limited, organisms compete for survival. Darwin recognized three types of struggles.

A. Intraspecific Struggle

Occurs among individuals of the same species. Example:

  • Deer competing for mates.
  • Plants of the same species competing for sunlight.

This is the most intense type of competition because individuals have similar needs.

B. Interspecific Struggle

Occurs between different species. Examples:

  • Lions and hyenas competing for prey.
  • Weeds competing with crop plants.

C. Environmental Struggle

Occurs against unfavorable environmental conditions. Examples:

  • Floods
  • Droughts
  • Earthquakes
  • Extreme temperatures
  • Diseases

3. Variations

No two individuals are exactly alike. Darwin observed that variation exists naturally within every population.

Importance of Variation

Variation provides the raw material for natural selection. Without variation, evolution cannot occur.

Types of Variations

Useful (Favorable) Variations

Increase survival and reproductive success. Examples:

  • Long neck in giraffes.
  • Camouflage in insects.
  • Thick fur in polar bears.

Harmful Variations

Reduce survival. Example: Poor eyesight in wild predators.

Neutral Variations

Neither beneficial nor harmful.

4. Survival of the Fittest

The phrase "Survival of the Fittest" was coined by Herbert Spencer and later adopted by Darwin.

Meaning

The "fittest" are not necessarily the strongest but those best adapted to their environment.

Examples:

  • Fast deer escape predators.
  • Well-camouflaged insects avoid detection.
  • Disease-resistant plants survive infections.

5. Natural Selection

Nature selects individuals with favorable variations. Individuals possessing advantageous traits:

  • Survive longer
  • Reproduce more
  • Pass their genes to offspring

Unfavorable variations are gradually eliminated. Natural selection acts continuously over many generations.

6. Origin of New Species (Speciation)

As favorable variations accumulate over many generations, populations become increasingly different. Eventually, reproductive isolation develops, resulting in the formation of new species.

Darwin's Examples of Natural Selection

A. Giraffe Evolution

Darwin suggested that ancestral giraffes had natural variation in neck length. Those with longer necks could reach higher leaves, survived better, and produced more offspring. Over generations, the average neck length increased.

B. Galápagos Finches (Adaptive Radiation)

Darwin studied finches on the Galápagos Islands. All finches descended from a common ancestor but evolved different beak shapes according to available food sources.

Food Source

Beak Adaptation

Seeds

Thick, strong beaks

Insects

Thin, pointed beaks

Fruits

Intermediate beaks

Cactus nectar

Long, slender beaks

This is a classic example of adaptive radiation.

Limitations of Darwinism

Although revolutionary, Darwinism had several limitations.

1. Could Not Explain the Origin of Variations

Darwin recognized variation but did not know how it arose. Modern genetics later showed that variation is produced by mutation and recombination.

2. No Knowledge of Genes

Darwin proposed inheritance but did not know about chromosomes, DNA, or genes.

3. No Explanation of Heredity

Darwin did not know the laws of inheritance, which were later explained by Gregor Mendel.

4. Ignored Mutations

Darwin believed evolution occurred through gradual accumulation of small variations. Modern biology recognizes that mutations play an important role.

5. No Population Genetics

Darwin did not explain how gene frequencies change in populations.

NEO-DARWINISM (MODERN SYNTHETIC THEORY OF EVOLUTION)

Definition

Neo-Darwinism is the modern theory of evolution that combines:

  • Darwin's theory of natural selection
  • Mendelian genetics
  • Population genetics
  • Mutation theory
  • Molecular biology

It explains both the origin of variation and the mechanism of natural selection.

Scientists Who Contributed to Neo-Darwinism

Major contributors include:

  • Gregor Mendel – Laws of inheritance
  • Ronald Fisher
  • J. B. S. Haldane
  • Sewall Wright
  • Theodosius Dobzhansky
  • Ernst Mayr
  • Julian Huxley

Basic Principles of Neo-Darwinism

Evolution results from changes in gene frequencies within populations.

The major evolutionary forces are:

  1. Mutation
  2. Recombination
  3. Gene flow
  4. Genetic drift
  5. Natural selection
  6. Isolation

Sources Of Genetic Variation

1. Mutation

Mutation is a sudden heritable change in DNA. Mutations may be:

  • Gene mutations
  • Chromosomal mutations

Mutations create new alleles.

2. Genetic Recombination

Occurs during meiosis through:

  • Crossing over
  • Independent assortment
  • Random fertilization

Produces genetically unique offspring.

3. Gene Flow

Movement of genes between populations through migration. Maintains genetic diversity.

4. Genetic Drift

Random change in allele frequency, especially in small populations. zExamples include:

  • Founder effect
  • Bottleneck effect

5. Natural Selection

Individuals with favorable genetic traits survive and reproduce more successfully.

6. Reproductive Isolation

Prevents gene flow between populations. Eventually leads to speciation.

Types of Natural Selection

1. Stabilizing Selection

  • Favors average individuals.
  • Eliminates extremes.
  • Maintains existing adaptations.

Example: Average human birth weight.

2. Directional Selection

  • Favors one extreme phenotype.
  • Population shifts toward one direction.

Example: Industrial melanism in peppered moths.

3. Disruptive Selection

  • Favors both extremes.
  • Intermediate forms are eliminated.
  • May lead to speciation.

Industrial Melanism

Example: Peppered Moth

Before Industrialization

  • Trees were covered with lichens.
  • Light-colored moths were camouflaged.
  • Dark moths were easily preyed upon.

After Industrialization

  • Tree trunks became dark due to soot.
  • Dark moths became camouflaged.
  • Light moths became more visible to predators.

Significance

This is one of the best examples of directional natural selection.

Antibiotic Resistance

When antibiotics are used:

  • Most bacteria die.
  • Resistant bacteria survive.
  • Resistant bacteria reproduce.
  • Over time, the population becomes resistant.

This demonstrates evolution by natural selection acting on genetic variation.

DARWINISM VS NEO-DARWINISM

Feature

Darwinism

Neo-Darwinism

Proposed by

Charles Darwin

Modern evolutionary biologists

Year

1859

1930–1940s

Basis

Natural selection

Genetics + Natural selection

Origin of variation

Not explained

Mutation and recombination

Heredity

Unknown

Explained by genes and DNA

Unit of evolution

Individual (conceptually)

Population (gene pool)

Evolution explained by

Natural selection alone

Multiple evolutionary forces

Role of mutation

Not recognized

Essential source of variation

Genetic drift

Not included

Included

Gene flow

Not included

Included

 

Importance Of Darwinism

  • First scientific explanation for evolution.
  • Introduced natural selection.
  • Explained adaptation.
  • Established the concept of common ancestry.
  • Formed the foundation of modern evolutionary biology.

Importance Of Neo-Darwinism

  • Integrates genetics with evolution.
  • Explains the origin and inheritance of variation.
  • Describes evolution quantitatively through changes in allele frequencies.
  • Forms the accepted modern explanation of evolutionary processes.

Flow Chart: Evolution by Neo-Darwinism

Mutation + Recombination

Genetic Variation in Population

Struggle for Existence

Natural Selection

Differential Survival and Reproduction

Change in Allele Frequency

Adaptation

Reproductive Isolation

Formation of New Species

High-Yield Points

·       Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859.

·       Natural selection is the central concept of Darwinism.

·       "Survival of the Fittest" was coined by Herbert Spencer.

·       Variation is the raw material for evolution.

·       Neo-Darwinism combines Darwin's theory with Mendelian genetics.

·       Mutation is the ultimate source of new genetic variation.

·       Recombination increases genetic diversity.

·       Gene flow introduces alleles into populations.

·       Genetic drift is more significant in small populations.

·       Stabilizing, directional, and disruptive selection are the three major patterns of natural selection.

·       Industrial melanism and antibiotic resistance are classic examples of natural selection in action.

 

Exam Tips

  • Darwinism explains how natural selection acts but not how variations arise.
  • Neo-Darwinism explains both the origin of genetic variation and the mechanism of evolution.
  • Remember the sequence: Variation → Natural Selection → Adaptation → Speciation.
  • In NEET, questions often distinguish Darwin's original theory from the Modern Synthetic Theory, so be clear about the role of mutation, recombination, gene flow, and genetic drift in Neo-Darwinism.