95
Figure 56.
As Darwin’s observation, beak shape varies among finch species. He postulated that the
beak of an ancestral species had adapted over time to equip the finches to acquire different food sources.
This illustration shows the beak shapes for four species of ground finch: 1.
Geospiza magnirostris
(the large
ground finch), 2.
G. fortis
(the medium ground finch), 3.
G. parvula
(the small tree finch), and 4.
Certhidea
olivacea
(the green-warbler finch).
Wallace and Darwin both observed similar patterns in other organisms and independently conceived
a mechanism to explain how and why such changes could take place. Darwin referred to this mechanism as
natural selection. Darwin argued that natural selection was an unavoidable result of three natural laws. First,
organisms' characteristics are inherited, or passed down from parent to offspring. Second, more offspring are
produced than
can survive; in other words, survival and reproduction resources are limited. All organisms'
reproductive capacity exceeds the availability of resources to support their numbers. As a result, each
generation competes for those resources. Both Darwin and Wallace derived
their understanding of this
principle from an essay by economist Thomas Malthus, who discussed it in relation to human populations.
Third, offspring differ in terms of their characteristics, and those differences are inherited. Out of these three
principles, Darwin and Wallace reasoned that offspring with inherited characteristics that allow them to best
compete for limited resources will survive and have more offspring than those individuals with variations that
are less able to compete. Because characteristics are inherited, they will be more prominent in the next
generation. This will lead to change in populations over generations in a process that Darwin called “descent
with modification.”
Natural selection papers by Darwin and Wallace were read aloud before
the Linnaean Society in
London in 1858. The following year, Darwin's book, On the Origin of Species, was published, outlining his
arguments for evolution by natural selection in great detail
35
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