Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Humans Reshaping Evolutionary History Of Species Around The Globe: Paper

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Nov, 2018 02:36 PM
    VANCOUVER — Swallows are evolving smaller, more manoeuvrable wings to help them dodge buildings and vehicles.
    Some fish are growing mouths that are smaller and harder to hook.
     
     
    Large animals from caribou to tuna are disappearing.
     
     
    Meanwhile, it's boom time for anything not too fussy about where it lives or what it eats.
     
     
    "It's a reshaping of the tree of life," said Sarah Otto, a University of British Columbia researcher, whose paper was published Wednesday by the London-based Proceedings of the Royal Society.
     
     
    Otto, a much-awarded and highly regarded theoretical biologist, says the activities and presence of human beings have become one of the largest drivers of evolutionary change everywhere on the planet.
     
     
    "Human impacts on the world are not just local," she said. "They are changing the course of evolutionary history for all species on the planet, and that's a remarkable concept to ponder."
     
     
    Earth scientists have long discussed the idea of the Anthropocene — a period of Earth's history defined by geological markers of human impact. Otto, after reviewing dozens of research papers, concludes the planet's biology is becoming similarly marked as plants and animals respond to human pressure.
     
     
    Her paper is replete with examples from bird species slowly forgetting to migrate to mosquito breeds adapted specifically to underground subway tunnels.
     
     
    Backyard bird feeders are behind changes in the beak shape and strength of house finches. Different mammals are becoming nocturnal as a way to avoid human conflict. Introduced species change the ground rules for native plants and animals.
     
     
    It's a mistake to think evolution requires millennia, said Otto.
     
     
    "Evolution happens really fast if the selection regimes are strong. We can see sometimes in plant populations evolutionary change in the course of years."
     
     
    If the changes come too fast for evolution to keep up, there's always extinction.
     
     
    Rates of species loss are now estimated to be 1,000 times higher than they were before human domination. More than one in five of all plant and animal species are considered at risk.
     
     
    Extinctions have always happened. But Otto said they're happening at such a pace and in response to such similar pressures that they are reducing the ability of evolution to respond to change.
     
     
    "We're losing the ability for evolution to bounce back."
     
     
    Forcing species into a human-formed box reduces variability, leaving evolution less to work with in response to future changes. And wiping species out removes them forever.
     
     
    "If we're eliminating the large-bodied mammals, even if humans went extinct on the planet, we're not going to see an immediate return of ecosystems to have the right balance of small, medium and large species," Otto said. 
     
     
    "We're cutting off options. We're cutting off options both within species by eliminating variability, and we're also cutting off options at the tree of life level by cutting off species."  
     
     
    Species that are doing well are generalists — crows, coyotes, dandelions.
     
     
    "The ones that can both tolerate and thrive in human-altered environments," said Otto. "The pigeons and the rats."
     
     
    The biggest single human-caused evolutionary pressure, Otto said, is climate change.  
     
     
    "The No. 1 thing we have to do is tackle climate change. If we don't do that, we're going to lose a lot more species."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C.'s LNG Outlook Dims After $36B Pacific Northwest LNG Project Killed

    B.C.'s LNG Outlook Dims After $36B Pacific Northwest LNG Project Killed
    A consortium led by Malaysia-owned Petronas announced Tuesday it would not proceed with the Pacific NorthWest LNG project near Port Edward, B.C., due to an "extremely challenging environment" brought on by prolonged low prices.

    B.C.'s LNG Outlook Dims After $36B Pacific Northwest LNG Project Killed

    1 Dead, 7 Hurt: Deadly Midway Accident In Ohio Prompts Edmonton Fair To Close Ride

    1 Dead, 7 Hurt: Deadly Midway Accident In Ohio Prompts Edmonton Fair To Close Ride
    A popular midway ride at this week's K-Days fair and exhibition in Edmonton has been shut down as a precaution after a deadly accident involving the same attraction at the Ohio State Fair.

    1 Dead, 7 Hurt: Deadly Midway Accident In Ohio Prompts Edmonton Fair To Close Ride

    RCMP Arrest Man In Death Of Northern Manitoba Girl Whose Body Was Found On Trail

    RCMP Arrest Man In Death Of Northern Manitoba Girl Whose Body Was Found On Trail
    GODS LAKE NARROWS, Man. — RCMP say they have arrested a man in the 2013 death of a girl who was brutally slain and left on a snowy trail in Gods Lake Narrows, Man.

    RCMP Arrest Man In Death Of Northern Manitoba Girl Whose Body Was Found On Trail

    Yukon Couple Tells Harrowing Tale After Being Stranded For Weeks

    Yukon Couple Tells Harrowing Tale After Being Stranded For Weeks
    RCMP in Haines Junction, 150 kilometres west of Whitehorse, say the couple was riding an all-terrain vehicle loaded with supplies on June 29 when the quad flipped in a fast-flowing river.

    Yukon Couple Tells Harrowing Tale After Being Stranded For Weeks

    Quebecer Wins A Million In Lottery For Second Time In Nine Years, Mulls Trip To Vegas

    Quebecer Wins A Million In Lottery For Second Time In Nine Years, Mulls Trip To Vegas
      For the second time in nine years, the 69-year-old Quebecer has won $1 million playing the lottery.

    Quebecer Wins A Million In Lottery For Second Time In Nine Years, Mulls Trip To Vegas

    John Horgan Travels To Washington, D.C., To Talk Softwood With Trump Trade Reps

    John Horgan Travels To Washington, D.C., To Talk Softwood With Trump Trade Reps
    Horgan has met with U.S. Trade Secretary Robert Lighthizer, U.S. Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross and Dave Reichert, a congressman from Washington State.

    John Horgan Travels To Washington, D.C., To Talk Softwood With Trump Trade Reps