Patterns of Evolution Species evolution has resulted in enormous variation in form and function. When two species diverge
from a common point of origin, it is called
divergent evolution . Divergent evolution can be seen in the forms
of flowering plant reproductive organs, which share the same basic anatomies but can look very different due
to selection in different physical environments and adaptation to different types of pollinators. (Figure 57).
Figure 57. Flowering plants shared a common ancestor. The appearances of the (a) dense blazing
star and (b) purple coneflower differ, but they share a basic morphology
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.
In other cases, distantly related species evolve similar phenotypes independently. For example, both
bats and insects have evolved flight, and they both have structures known as wings that are adaptations to
flight. However, the wings of bats and insects evolved from very different starting points. When similar
structures arise through evolution independently in different species it is called
convergent evolution . The
wings of bats and insects are called
analogous structures ; they are similar in function and appearance, but do
not share an origin in a common ancestor. Instead, they evolved independently in the two lineages. The wings
of a hummingbird and an ostrich are
homologous structures , meaning they share similarities (despite their
differences resulting from evolutionary divergence). The wings of hummingbirds and divergences did not
evolve independently in the hummingbird lineage and the ostrich lineage—they descended from a common
ancestor with wings.
The Modern Synthesis At the time Darwin and Wallace developed their concept of natural selection, the mechanisms of
inheritance, genetics, were unknown. This lack of understanding hampered understanding of many aspects of
evolution. In fact, at the time, blending inheritance was the dominant (and incorrect) genetic theory, making it
difficult to understand how natural selection might work. Darwin and Wallace were unaware of the genetics
work of Austrian monk Gregor Mendel, which was published in 1866, not long after On the Origin of Species
was published. Mendel's work was rediscovered in the early twentieth century, when geneticists were rapidly
grasping the fundamentals of inheritance.
Initially, biologists struggled to understand how gradual evolution could occur due to the newly
discovered particulate nature of genes. But over the next few decades’ genetics and evolution were integrated
in what became known as the