On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection (1859)
by Charles Darwin
CHAPTER VI.
DIFFICULTIES ON THEORY.
Difficulties on the theory
of descent with modificationTransitionsAbsence or rarity of
transitional varietiesTransitions in habits of lifeDiversified
habits in the same speciesSpecies with habits widely different from
those of their alliesOrgans of extreme perfectionMeans of
transitionCases of difficultyNatura non facit saltumOrgans
of small importanceOrgans not in all cases absolutely perfectThe
law of Unity of Type and of the Conditions of Existence embraced by the
theory of Natural Selection.


ONG before having arrived at
this part of my work, a crowd of difficulties will have occurred to the
reader. Some of them are so grave that to this day I can never reflect on
them without being staggered; but, to the best of my judgment, the
greater number are only apparent, and those that are real are not, I think,
fatal to my theory.
These difficulties and objections may be classed under the following
heads:Firstly, why, if species have descended from other species
by insensibly fine gradations, do we not everywhere see innumerable
transitional forms? Why is not all nature in confusion instead of the
species being, as we see them, well defined?
Secondly, is it possible that an animal having, for instance, the
structure and habits of a bat, could have been formed by the
modification of some animal with wholly different habits? Can we
believe that natural selection could produce, on the one hand, organs
of trifling importance, such as the tail of a giraffe, which serves as
a fly-flapper, and, on the other hand, organs of such wonderful
structure, as the eye, of which we hardly as yet fully understand the
inimitable perfection?
Thirdly, can instincts be acquired and modified through natural
selection? What shall we say to so marvellous an instinct as that
which leads the bee to make cells, which have practically anticipated
the discoveries of profound mathematicians?
Fourthly, how can we account for species, when crossed, being sterile
and producing sterile offspring, whereas, when varieties are crossed,
their fertility is unimpaired?
The two first heads shall be here discussedInstinct and Hybridism
in separate chapters.
On the absence or rarity of transitional
varieties.As natural selection acts solely by the
preservation of profitable modifications, each new form will tend in a
fully-stocked country to take the place of, and finally to exterminate,
its own less improved parent or other less-favoured forms with which
it comes into competition. Thus extinction and natural selection will,
as we have seen, go hand in hand. Hence, if we look at each species as
descended from some other unknown form, both the parent and all the
transitional varieties will generally have been exterminated by the
very process of formation and perfection of the new form.
But, as by this theory innumerable transitional forms must have
existed, why do we not find them embedded in countless numbers in the
crust of the earth? It will be much more convenient to discuss this
question in the chapter on the Imperfection of the geological record;
and I will here only state that I believe the answer mainly lies in
the record being incomparably less perfect than is generally supposed;
the imperfection of the record being chiefly due to organic beings not
inhabiting profound depths of the sea, and to their remains being
embedded and preserved to a future age only in masses of sediment
sufficiently thick and extensive to withstand an enormous amount of
future degradation; and such fossiliferous masses can be accumulated
only where much sediment is deposited on the shallow bed of the sea,
whilst it slowly subsides. These contingencies will concur only
rarely, and after enormously long intervals. Whilst the bed of the sea
is stationary or is rising, or when very little sediment is being
deposited, there will be blanks in our geological history. The crust
of the earth is a vast museum; but the natural collections have been
made only at intervals of time immensely remote.
But it may be urged that when several closely-allied species inhabit
the same territory we surely ought to find at the present time many
transitional forms. Let us take a simple case: in travelling from
north to south over a continent, we generally meet at successive
intervals with closely allied or representative species, evidently
filling nearly the same place in the natural economy of the land.
These representative species often meet and interlock; and as the one
becomes rarer and rarer, the other becomes more and more frequent,
till the one replaces the other. But if we compare these species where
they intermingle, they are generally as absolutely distinct from each
other in every detail of structure as are specimens taken from the
metropolis inhabited by each. By my theory these allied species have
descended from a common parent; and during the process of
modification, each has become adapted to the conditions of life of its
own region, and has supplanted and exterminated its original parent
and all the transitional varieties between its past and present
states. Hence we ought not to expect at the present time to meet with
numerous transitional varieties in each region, though they must have
existed there, and may be embedded there in a fossil condition. But in
the intermediate region, having intermediate conditions of life, why
do we not now find closely-linking intermediate varieties? This
difficulty for a long time quite confounded me. But I think it can be
in large part explained.
In the first place we should be extremely cautious in inferring,
because an area is now continuous, that it has been continuous during
a long period. Geology would lead us to believe that almost every
continent has been broken up into islands even during the later
tertiary periods; and in such islands distinct species might have been
separately formed without the possibility of intermediate varieties
existing in the intermediate zones. By changes in the form of the land
and of climate, marine areas now continuous must often have existed
within recent times in a far less continuous and uniform condition
than at present. But I will pass over this way of escaping from the
difficulty; for I believe that many perfectly defined species have
been formed on strictly continuous areas; though I do not doubt that
the formerly broken condition of areas now continuous has played an
important part in the formation of new species, more especially with
freely-crossing and wandering animals.
In looking at species as they are now distributed over a wide area, we
generally find them tolerably numerous over a large territory, then
becoming somewhat abruptly rarer and rarer on the confines, and
finally disappearing. Hence the neutral territory between two
representative species is generally narrow in comparison with the
territory proper to each. We see the same fact in ascending mountains,
and sometimes it is quite remarkable how abruptly, as Alph. De
Candolle has observed, a common alpine species disappears. The same
fact has been noticed by Forbes in sounding the depths of the sea with
the dredge. To those who look at climate and the physical conditions
of life as the all-important elements of distribution, these facts
ought to cause surprise, as climate and height or depth graduate away
insensibly. But when we bear in mind that almost every species, even
in its metropolis, would increase immensely in numbers, were it not
for other competing species; that nearly all either prey on or serve
as prey for others; in short, that each organic being is either
directly or indirectly related in the most important manner to other
organic beings, we must see that the range of the inhabitants of any
country by no means exclusively depends on insensibly changing
physical conditions, but in large part on the presence of other
species, on which it depends, or by which it is destroyed, or with
which it comes into competition; and as these species are already
defined objects (however they may have become so), not blending one
into another by insensible gradations, the range of any one species,
depending as it does on the range of others, will tend to be sharply
defined. Moreover, each species on the confines of its range, where it
exists in lessened numbers, will, during fluctuations in the number of
its enemies or of its prey, or in the seasons, be extremely liable to
utter extermination; and thus its geographical range will come to be
still more sharply defined.
If I am right in believing that allied or representative species, when
inhabiting a continuous area, are generally so distributed that each
has a wide range, with a comparatively narrow neutral territory
between them, in which they become rather suddenly rarer and rarer;
then, as varieties do not essentially differ from species, the same
rule will probably apply to both; and if we in imagination adapt a
varying species to a very large area, we shall have to adapt two
varieties to two large areas, and a third variety to a narrow
intermediate zone. The intermediate variety, consequently, will exist
in lesser numbers from inhabiting a narrow and lesser area; and
practically, as far as I can make out, this rule holds good with
varieties in a state of nature. I have met with striking instances of
the rule in the case of varieties intermediate between well-marked
varieties in the genus Balanus. And it would appear from information
given me by Mr Watson, Dr Asa Gray, and Mr Wollaston, that generally
when varieties intermediate between two other forms occur, they are
much rarer numerically than the forms which they connect. Now, if we
may trust these facts and inferences, and therefore conclude that
varieties linking two other varieties together have generally existed
in lesser numbers than the forms which they connect, then, I think, we
can understand why intermediate varieties should not endure for very
long periods;why as a general rule they should be exterminated
and disappear, sooner than the forms which they originally linked
together.
For any form existing in lesser numbers would, as already remarked,
run a greater chance of being exterminated than one existing in large
numbers; and in this particular case the intermediate form would be
eminently liable to the inroads of closely allied forms existing on
both sides of it. But a far more important consideration, as I
believe, is that, during the process of further modification, by which
two varieties are supposed on my theory to be converted and perfected
into two distinct species, the two which exist in larger numbers from
inhabiting larger areas, will have a great advantage over the
intermediate variety, which exists in smaller numbers in a narrow and
intermediate zone. For forms existing in larger numbers will always
have a better chance, within any given period, of presenting further
favourable variations for natural selection to seize on, than will the
rarer forms which exist in lesser numbers. Hence, the more common
forms, in the race for life, will tend to beat and supplant the less
common forms, for these will be more slowly modified and improved. It
is the same principle which, as I believe, accounts for the common
species in each country, as shown in the second chapter, presenting on
an average a greater number of well-marked varieties than do the rarer
species. I may illustrate what I mean by supposing three varieties of
sheep to be kept, one adapted to an extensive mountainous region; a
second to a comparatively narrow, hilly tract; and a third to wide
plains at the base; and that the inhabitants are all trying with equal
steadiness and skill to improve their stocks by selection; the chances
in this case will be strongly in favour of the great holders on the
mountains or on the plains improving their breeds more quickly than
the small holders on the intermediate narrow, hilly tract; and
consequently the improved mountain or plain breed will soon take the
place of the less improved hill breed; and thus the two breeds, which
originally existed in greater numbers, will come into close contact
with each other, without the interposition of the supplanted,
intermediate hill-variety.
To sum up, I believe that species come to be tolerably well-defined
objects, and do not at any one period present an inextricable chaos of
varying and intermediate links: firstly, because new varieties are
very slowly formed, for variation is a very slow process, and natural
selection can do nothing until favourable variations chance to occur,
and until a place in the natural polity of the country can be better
filled by some modification of some one or more of its
inhabitants. And such new places will depend on slow changes of
climate, or on the occasional immigration of new inhabitants, and,
probably, in a still more important degree, on some of the old
inhabitants becoming slowly modified, with the new forms thus produced
and the old ones acting and reacting on each other. So that, in any
one region and at any one time, we ought only to see a few species
presenting slight modifications of structure in some degree permanent;
and this assuredly we do see.
Secondly, areas now continuous must often have existed within the
recent period in isolated portions, in which many forms, more
especially amongst the classes which unite for each birth and wander
much, may have separately been rendered sufficiently distinct to rank
as representative species. In this case, intermediate varieties
between the several representative species and their common parent,
must formerly have existed in each broken portion of the land, but
these links will have been supplanted and exterminated during the
process of natural selection, so that they will no longer exist in a
living state.
Thirdly, when two or more varieties have been formed in different
portions of a strictly continuous area, intermediate varieties will,
it is probable, at first have been formed in the intermediate zones,
but they will generally have had a short duration. For these
intermediate varieties will, from reasons already assigned (namely
from what we know of the actual distribution of closely allied or
representative species, and likewise of acknowledged varieties), exist
in the intermediate zones in lesser numbers than the varieties which
they tend to connect. From this cause alone the intermediate varieties
will be liable to accidental extermination; and during the process of
further modification through natural selection, they will almost
certainly be beaten and supplanted by the forms which they connect;
for these from existing in greater numbers will, in the aggregate,
present more variation, and thus be further improved through natural
selection and gain further advantages.
Lastly, looking not to any one time, but to all time, if my theory be
true, numberless intermediate varieties, linking most closely all the
species of the same group together, must assuredly have existed; but
the very process of natural selection constantly tends, as has been so
often remarked, to exterminate the parent forms and the intermediate
links. Consequently evidence of their former existence could be found
only amongst fossil remains, which are preserved, as we shall in a
future chapter attempt to show, in an extremely imperfect and
intermittent record.
On the origin and transitions of organic beings
with peculiar habits and structure.It has been asked by the
opponents of such views as I hold, how, for instance, a land carnivorous
animal could have been converted into one with aquatic habits; for how
could the animal in its transitional state have subsisted? It would be
easy to show that within the same group carnivorous animals exist having
every intermediate grade between truly aquatic and strictly terrestrial
habits; and as each exists by a struggle for life, it is clear that
each is well adapted in its habits to its place in nature. Look at the
Mustela vison of North America, which has webbed feet and which
resembles an otter in its fur, short legs, and form of tail; during
summer this animal dives for and preys on fish, but during the long
winter it leaves the frozen waters, and preys like other polecats on
mice and land animals. If a different case had been taken, and it had
been asked how an insectivorous quadruped could possibly have been
converted into a flying bat, the question would have been far more
difficult, and I could have given no answer. Yet I think such
difficulties have very little weight.
Here, as on other occasions, I lie under a heavy disadvantage, for out
of the many striking cases which I have collected, I can give only one
or two instances of transitional habits and structures in closely
allied species of the same genus; and of diversified habits, either
constant or occasional, in the same species. And it seems to me that
nothing less than a long list of such cases is sufficient to lessen
the difficulty in any particular case like that of the bat.
Look at the family of squirrels; here we have the finest gradation
from animals with their tails only slightly flattened, and from
others, as Sir J. Richardson has remarked, with the posterior part of
their bodies rather wide and with the skin on their flanks rather
full, to the so-called flying squirrels; and flying squirrels have
their limbs and even the base of the tail united by a broad expanse of
skin, which serves as a parachute and allows them to glide through the
air to an astonishing distance from tree to tree. We cannot doubt that
each structure is of use to each kind of squirrel in its own country,
by enabling it to escape birds or beasts of prey, or to collect food
more quickly, or, as there is reason to believe, by lessening the
danger from occasional falls. But it does not follow from this fact
that the structure of each squirrel is the best that it is possible to
conceive under all natural conditions. Let the climate and vegetation
change, let other competing rodents or new beasts of prey immigrate,
or old ones become modified, and all analogy would lead us to believe
that some at least of the squirrels would decrease in numbers or
become exterminated, unless they also became modified and improved in
structure in a corresponding manner. Therefore, I can see no
difficulty, more especially under changing conditions of life, in the
continued preservation of individuals with fuller and fuller
flank-membranes, each modification being useful, each being
propagated, until by the accumulated effects of this process of
natural selection, a perfect so-called flying squirrel was
produced.
Now look at the Galeopithecus or flying lemur,
which formerly was falsely ranked amongst bats. It has an extremely
wide flank-membrane, stretching from the corners of the jaw to the
tail, and including the limbs and the elongated fingers: the flank
membrane is, also, furnished with an extensor muscle. Although no
graduated links of structure, fitted for gliding through the air, now
connect the Galeopithecus with the other Lemuridae, yet I can see no
difficulty in supposing that such links formerly existed, and that
each had been formed by the same steps as in the case of the less
perfectly gliding squirrels; and that each grade of structure had been
useful to its possessor. Nor can I see any insuperable difficulty in
further believing it possible that the membrane-connected fingers and
fore-arm of the Galeopithecus might be greatly lengthened by natural
selection; and this, as far as the
organs of flight are
concerned, would convert it into a bat. In bats which have the
wing-membrane extended from the top of the shoulder to the tail,
including the hind-legs, we perhaps see traces of an apparatus
originally constructed for gliding through the air rather than for
flight.
If about a dozen genera of birds had become extinct or were unknown,
who would have ventured to have surmised that birds might have existed
which used their wings solely as flappers, like the logger-headed duck
(Micropterus of Eyton); as fins in the water and front legs on the
land, like the penguin; as sails, like the ostrich; and functionally
for no purpose, like the Apteryx. Yet the structure of each of these
birds is good for it, under the conditions of life to which it is
exposed, for each has to live by a struggle; but it is not necessarily
the best possible under all possible conditions. It must not be
inferred from these remarks that any of the grades of wing-structure
here alluded to, which perhaps may all have resulted from disuse,
indicate the natural steps by which birds have acquired their perfect
power of flight; but they serve, at least, to show what diversified
means of transition are possible.
Seeing that a few members of such water-breathing classes as the
Crustacea and Mollusca are adapted to live on the land, and seeing
that we have flying birds and mammals, flying insects of the most
diversified types, and formerly had flying reptiles, it is conceivable
that flying-fish, which now glide far through the air, slightly rising
and turning by the aid of their fluttering fins, might have been
modified into perfectly winged animals. If early transitional state
they had been inhabitants of the open ocean, and had used their
incipient organs of flight exclusively, as far as we know, to escape
being devoured by other fish?
When we see any structure highly perfected for any particular habit,
as the wings of a bird for flight, we should bear in mind that animals
displaying early transitional grades of the structure will seldom
continue to exist to the present day, for they will have been
supplanted by the very process of perfection through natural
selection. Furthermore, we may conclude that transitional grades
between structures fitted for very different habits of life will
rarely have been developed at an early period in great numbers and
under many subordinate forms. Thus, to return to our imaginary
illustration of the flying-fish, it does not seem probable that fishes
capable of true flight would have been developed under many
subordinate forms, for taking prey of many kinds in many ways, on the
land and in the water, until their organs of flight had come to a high
stage of perfection, so as to have given them a decided advantage over
other animals in the battle for life. Hence the chance of discovering
species with transitional grades of structure in a fossil condition
will always be less, from their having existed in lesser numbers, than
in the case of species with fully developed structures.
I will now give two or three instances of diversified and of changed
habits in the individuals of the same species. When either case
occurs, it would be easy for natural selection to fit the animal, by
some modification of its structure, for its changed habits, or
exclusively for one of its several different habits. But it is
difficult to tell, and immaterial for us, whether habits generally
change first and structure afterwards; or whether slight modifications
of structure lead to changed habits; both probably often change almost
simultaneously. Of cases of changed habits it will suffice merely to
allude to that of the many British insects which now feed on exotic
plants, or exclusively on artificial substances. Of diversified habits
innumerable instances could be given: I have often watched a tyrant
flycatcher (Saurophagus sulphuratus) in South America, hovering over
one spot and then proceeding to another, like a kestrel, and at other
times standing stationary on the margin of water, and then dashing
like a kingfisher at a fish. In our own country the larger titmouse
(Parus major) may be seen climbing branches, almost like a creeper; it
often, like a shrike, kills small birds by blows on the head; and I
have many times seen and heard it hammering the seeds of the yew on a
branch, and thus breaking them like a nuthatch. In North America the
black bear was seen by Hearne swimming for hours with widely open
mouth, thus catching, like a whale, insects in the water. Even in so
extreme a case as this, if the supply of insects were constant, and if
better adapted competitors did not already exist in the country, I can
see no difficulty in a race of bears being rendered, by natural
selection, more and more aquatic in their structure and habits, with
larger and larger mouths, till a creature was produced as monstrous as
a whale.
As we sometimes see individuals of a species following habits widely
different from those both of their own species and of the other
species of the same genus, we might expect, on my theory, that such
individuals would occasionally have given rise to new species, having
anomalous habits, and with their structure either slightly or
considerably modified from that of their proper type. And such
instances do occur in nature. Can a more striking instance of
adaptation be given than that of a woodpecker for climbing trees and
for seizing insects in the chinks of the bark? Yet in North America
there are woodpeckers which feed largely on fruit, and others with
elongated wings which chase insects on the wing; and on the plains of
La Plata, where not a tree grows, there is a woodpecker, which in
every essential part of its organisation, even in its colouring, in
the harsh tone of its voice, and undulatory flight, told me plainly of
its close blood-relationship to our common species; yet it is a
woodpecker which never climbs a tree!
Petrels are the most aërial and oceanic of birds, yet in the
quiet Sounds of Tierra del Fuego, the Puffinuria berardi, in its
general habits, in its astonishing power of diving, its manner of
swimming, and of flying when unwillingly it takes flight, would be
mistaken by any one for an auk or grebe; nevertheless, it is
essentially a petrel, but with many parts of its organisation
profoundly modified. On the other hand, the acutest observer by
examining the dead body of the water-ouzel would never have suspected
its sub-aquatic habits; yet this anomalous member of the strictly
terrestrial thrush family wholly subsists by diving, grasping the
stones with its feet and using its wings under water.
He who believes that each being has been created as we now see it,
must occasionally have felt surprise when he has met with an animal
having habits and structure not at all in agreement. What can be
plainer than that the webbed feet of ducks and geese are formed for
swimming; yet there are upland geese with webbed feet which rarely or
never go near the water; and no one except Audubon has seen the
frigate-bird, which has all its four toes webbed, alight on the
surface of the sea. On the other hand, grebes and coots are eminently
aquatic, although their toes are only bordered by membrane. What seems
plainer than that the long toes of grallatores are formed for walking
over swamps and floating plants, yet the water-hen is nearly as
aquatic as the coot; and the landrail nearly as terrestrial as the
quail or partridge. In such cases, and many others could be given,
habits have changed without a corresponding change of structure. The
webbed feet of the upland goose may be said to have become rudimentary
in function, though not in structure. In the frigate-bird, the
deeply-scooped membrane between the toes shows that structure has
begun to change.
He who believes in separate and innumerable acts of creation will say,
that in these cases it has pleased the Creator to cause a being of one
type to take the place of one of another type; but this seems to me
only restating the fact in dignified language. He who believes in the
struggle for existence and in the principle of natural selection, will
acknowledge that every organic being is constantly endeavouring to
increase in numbers; and that if any one being vary ever so little,
either in habits or structure, and thus gain an advantage over some
other inhabitant of the country, it will seize on the place of that
inhabitant, however different it may be from its own place. Hence it
will cause him no surprise that there should be geese and
frigate-birds with webbed feet, either living on the dry land or most
rarely alighting on the water; that there should be long-toed
corncrakes living in meadows instead of in swamps; that there should
be woodpeckers where not a tree grows; that there should be diving
thrushes, and petrels with the habits of auks.
Organs of extreme perfection and complication. To suppose that
the eye, with all its inimitable contrivances for adjusting the focus
to different distances, for admitting different amounts of light, and
for the correction of spherical and chromatic aberration, could have
been formed by natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in
the highest possible degree. Yet reason tells me, that if numerous
gradations from a perfect and complex eye to one very imperfect and
simple, each grade being useful to its possessor, can be shown to
exist; if further, the eye does vary ever so slightly, and the
variations be inherited, which is certainly the case; and if any
variation or modification in the organ be ever useful to an animal
under changing conditions of life, then the difficulty of believing
that a perfect and complex eye could be formed by natural selection,
though insuperable by our imagination, can hardly be considered real.
How a nerve comes to be sensitive to light, hardly concerns us more
than how life itself first originated; but I may remark that several
facts make me suspect that any sensitive nerve may be rendered
sensitive to light, and likewise to those coarser vibrations of the
air which produce sound.
In looking for the gradations by which an organ in any species has
been perfected, we ought to look exclusively to its lineal ancestors;
but this is scarcely ever possible, and we are forced in each case to
look to species of the same group, that is to the collateral
descendants from the same original parent-form, in order to see what
gradations are possible, and for the chance of some gradations having
been transmitted from the earlier stages of descent, in an unaltered
or little altered condition. Amongst existing Vertebrata, we find but
a small amount of gradation in the structure of the eye, and from
fossil species we can learn nothing on this head. In this great class
we should probably have to descend far beneath the lowest known
fossiliferous stratum to discover the earlier stages, by which the eye
has been perfected.
In the Articulata we can commence a series with an optic nerve merely
coated with pigment, and without any other mechanism; and from this
low stage, numerous gradations of structure, branching off in two
fundamentally different lines, can be shown to exist, until we reach a
moderately high stage of perfection. In certain crustaceans, for
instance, there is a double cornea, the inner one divided into facets,
within each of which there is a lens shaped swelling. In other
crustaceans the transparent cones which are coated by pigment, and
which properly act only by excluding lateral pencils of light, are
convex at their upper ends and must act by convergence; and at their
lower ends there seems to be an imperfect vitreous substance. With
these facts, here far too briefly and imperfectly given, which show
that there is much graduated diversity in the eyes of living
crustaceans, and bearing in mind how small the number of living
animals is in proportion to those which have become extinct, I can see
no very great difficulty (not more than in the case of many other
structures) in believing that natural selection has converted the
simple apparatus of an optic nerve merely coated with pigment and
invested by transparent membrane, into an optical instrument as
perfect as is possessed by any member of the great Articulate
class.
He who will go thus far, if he find on finishing this treatise that
large bodies of facts, otherwise inexplicable, can be explained by the
theory of descent, ought not to hesitate to go further, and to admit
that a structure even as perfect as the eye of an eagle might be
formed by natural selection, although in this case he does not know
any of the transitional grades. His reason ought to conquer his
imagination; though I have felt the difficulty far too keenly to be
surprised at any degree of hesitation in extending the principle of
natural selection to such startling lengths.
It is scarcely possible to avoid comparing the eye to a telescope. We
know that this instrument has been perfected by the long-continued
efforts of the highest human intellects; and we naturally infer that
the eye has been formed by a somewhat analogous process. But may not
this inference be presumptuous? Have we any right to assume that the
Creator works by intellectual powers like those of man? If we must
compare the eye to an optical instrument, we ought in imagination to
take a thick layer of transparent tissue, with a nerve sensitive to
light beneath, and then suppose every part of this layer to be
continually changing slowly in density, so as to separate into layers
of different densities and thicknesses, placed at different distances
from each other, and with the surfaces of each layer slowly changing
in form. Further we must suppose that there is a power always intently
watching each slight accidental alteration in the transparent layers;
and carefully selecting each alteration which, under varied
circumstances, may in any way, or in any degree, tend to produce a
distincter image. We must suppose each new state of the instrument to
be multiplied by the million; and each to be preserved till a better
be produced, and then the old ones to be destroyed. In living bodies,
variation will cause the slight alterations, generation will multiply
them almost infinitely, and natural selection will pick out with
unerring skill each improvement. Let this process go on for millions
on millions of years; and during each year on millions of individuals
of many kinds; and may we not believe that a living optical instrument
might thus be formed as superior to one of glass, as the works of the
Creator are to those of man?
If it could be demonstrated that any complex organ existed, which
could not possibly have been formed by numerous, successive, slight
modifications, my theory would absolutely break down. But I can find
out no such case. No doubt many organs exist of which we do not know
the transitional grades, more especially if we look to much-isolated
species, round which, according to my theory, there has been much
extinction. Or again, if we look to an organ common to all the members
of a large class, for in this latter case the organ must have been
first formed at an extremely remote period, since which all the many
members of the class have been developed; and in order to discover the
early transitional grades through which the organ has passed, we
should have to look to very ancient ancestral forms, long since become
extinct.
We should be extremely cautious in concluding that an organ could not
have been formed by transitional gradations of some kind. Numerous
cases could be given amongst the lower animals of the same organ
performing at the same time wholly distinct functions; thus the
alimentary canal respires, digests, and excretes in the larva of the
dragon-fly and in the fish Cobites. In the Hydra, the animal may be
turned inside out, and the exterior surface will then digest and the
stomach respire. In such cases natural selection might easily
specialise, if any advantage were thus gained, a part or organ, which
had performed two functions, for one function alone, and thus wholly
change its nature by insensible steps. Two distinct organs sometimes
perform simultaneously the same function in the same individual; to
give one instance, there are fish with gills or branchiae that breathe
the air dissolved in the water, at the same time that they breathe
free air in their swimbladders, this latter organ having a ductus
pneumaticus for its supply, and being divided by highly vascular
partitions. In these cases, one of the two organs might with ease be
modified and perfected so as to perform all the work by itself, being
aided during the process of modification by the other organ; and then
this other organ might be modified for some other and quite distinct
purpose, or be quite obliterated.
The illustration of the swimbladder in fishes is a good one, because
it shows us clearly the highly important fact that an organ originally
constructed for one purpose, namely flotation, may be converted into
one for a wholly different purpose, namely respiration. The
swimbladder has, also, been worked in as an accessory to the auditory
organs of certain fish, or, for I do not know which view is now
generally held, a part of the auditory apparatus has been worked in as
a complement to the swimbladder. All physiologists admit that the
swimbladder is homologous, or 'ideally similar,' in position and
structure with the lungs of the higher vertebrate animals: hence there
seems to me to be no great difficulty in believing that natural
selection has actually converted a swimbladder into a lung, or organ
used exclusively for respiration.
I can, indeed, hardly doubt that all vertebrate animals having true
lungs have descended by ordinary generation from an ancient prototype,
of which we know nothing, furnished with a floating apparatus or
swimbladder. We can thus, as I infer from Professor Owen's interesting
description of these parts, understand the strange fact that every
particle of food and drink which we swallow has to pass over the
orifice of the trachea, with some risk of falling into the lungs,
notwithstanding the beautiful contrivance by which the glottis is
closed. In the higher Vertebrata the branchiae have wholly
disappearedthe slits on the sides of the neck and the loop-like
course of the arteries still marking in the embryo their former
position. But it is conceivable that the now utterly lost branchiae
might have been gradually worked in by natural selection for some
quite distinct purpose: in the same manner as, on the view entertained
by some naturalists that the branchiae and dorsal scales of Annelids
are homologous with the wings and wing-covers of insects, it is
probable that organs which at a very ancient period served for
respiration have been actually converted into organs of flight.
In considering transitions of organs, it is so important to bear in
mind the probability of conversion from one function to another, that
I will give one more instance. Pedunculated cirripedes have two
minute folds of skin, called by me the ovigerous frena, which serve,
through the means of a sticky secretion, to retain the eggs until they
are hatched within the sack. These cirripedes have no branchiae, the
whole surface of the body and sack, including the small frena, serving
for respiration. The Balanidae or sessile cirripedes, on the other
hand, have no ovigerous frena, the eggs lying loose at the bottom of
the sack, in the well-enclosed shell; but they have large folded
branchiae. Now I think no one will dispute that the ovigerous frena
in the one family are strictly homologous with the branchiae of the
other family; indeed, they graduate into each other. Therefore I do
not doubt that little folds of skin, which originally served as
ovigerous frena, but which, likewise, very slightly aided the act of
respiration, have been gradually converted by natural selection into
branchiae, simply through an increase in their size and the
obliteration of their adhesive glands. If all pedunculated cirripedes
had become extinct, and they have already suffered far more extinction
than have sessile cirripedes, who would ever have imagined that the
branchiae in this latter family had originally existed as organs for
preventing the ova from being washed out of the sack?
Although we must be extremely cautious in concluding that any organ
could not possibly have been produced by successive transitional
gradations, yet, undoubtedly, grave cases of difficulty occur, some of
which will be discussed in my future work.
One of the gravest is that of neuter insects, which are often very
differently constructed from either the males or fertile females; but
this case will be treated of in the next chapter. The electric organs
of fishes offer another case of special difficulty; it is impossible
to conceive by what steps these wondrous organs have been produced;
but, as Owen and others have remarked, their intimate structure
closely resembles that of common muscle; and as it has lately been
shown that Rays have an organ closely analogous to the electric
apparatus, and yet do not, as Matteuchi asserts, discharge any
electricity, we must own that we are far too ignorant to argue that no
transition of any kind is possible.
The electric organs offer another and even more serious difficulty;
for they occur in only about a dozen fishes, of which several are
widely remote in their affinities. Generally when the same organ
appears in several members of the same class, especially if in members
having very different habits of life, we may attribute its presence to
inheritance from a common ancestor; and its absence in some of the
members to its loss through disuse or natural selection. But if the
electric organs had been inherited from one ancient progenitor thus
provided, we might have expected that all electric fishes would have
been specially related to each other. Nor does geology at all lead to
the belief that formerly most fishes had electric organs, which most
of their modified descendants have lost. The presence of luminous
organs in a few insects, belonging to different families and orders,
offers a parallel case of difficulty. Other cases could be given; for
instance in plants, the very curious contrivance of a mass of
pollen-grains, borne on a foot-stalk with a sticky gland at the end,
is the same in Orchis and Asclepias, genera almost as remote as
possible amongst flowering plants. In all these cases of two very
distinct species furnished with apparently the same anomalous organ,
it should be observed that, although the general appearance and
function of the organ may be the same, yet some fundamental difference
can generally be detected. I am inclined to believe that in nearly the
same way as two men have sometimes independently hit on the very same
invention, so natural selection, working for the good of each being
and taking advantage of analogous variations, has sometimes modified
in very nearly the same manner two parts in two organic beings, which
owe but little of their structure in common to inheritance from the
same ancestor.
Although in many cases it is most difficult to conjecture by what
transitions an organ could have arrived at its present state; yet,
considering that the proportion of living and known forms to the
extinct and unknown is very small, I have been astonished how rarely
an organ can be named, towards which no transitional grade is known to
lead. The truth of this remark is indeed shown by that old canon in
natural history of 'Natura non facit saltum.' We meet with this
admission in the writings of almost every experienced naturalist; or,
as Milne Edwards has well expressed it, nature is prodigal in variety,
but niggard in innovation. Why, on the theory of Creation, should this
be so? Why should all the parts and organs of many independent beings,
each supposed to have been separately created for its proper place in
nature, be so invariably linked together by graduated steps? Why
should not Nature have taken a leap from structure to structure? On
the theory of natural selection, we can clearly understand why she
should not; for natural selection can act only by taking advantage of
slight successive variations; she can never take a leap, but must
advance by the shortest and slowest steps.
Organs of little apparent importance. As natural selection acts
by life and death, by the preservation of individuals with any
favourable variation, and by the destruction of those with any
unfavourable deviation of structure, I have sometimes felt much
difficulty in understanding the origin of simple parts, of which the
importance does not seem sufficient to cause the preservation of
successively varying individuals. I have sometimes felt as much
difficulty, though of a very different kind, on this head, as in the
case of an organ as perfect and complex as the eye.
In the first place, we are much too ignorant in regard to the whole
economy of any one organic being, to say what slight modifications
would be of importance or not. In a former chapter I have given
instances of most trifling characters, such as the down on fruit and
the colour of the flesh, which, from determining the attacks of
insects or from being correlated with constitutional differences,
might assuredly be acted on by natural selection. The tail of the
giraffe looks like an artificially constructed fly-flapper; and it
seems at first incredible that this could have been adapted for its
present purpose by successive slight modifications, each better and
better, for so trifling an object as driving away flies; yet we should
pause before being too positive even in this case, for we know that
the distribution and existence of cattle and other animals in South
America absolutely depends on their power of resisting the attacks of
insects: so that individuals which could by any means defend
themselves from these small enemies, would be able to range into new
pastures and thus gain a great advantage. It is not that the larger
quadrupeds are actually destroyed (except in some rare cases) by the
flies, but they are incessantly harassed and their strength reduced,
so that they are more subject to disease, or not so well enabled in a
coming dearth to search for food, or to escape from beasts of prey.
Organs now of trifling importance have probably in some cases been of
high importance to an early progenitor, and, after having been slowly
perfected at a former period, have been transmitted in nearly the same
state, although now become of very slight use; and any actually
injurious deviations in their structure will always have been checked
by natural selection. Seeing how important an organ of locomotion the
tail is in most aquatic animals, its general presence and use for many
purposes in so many land animals, which in their lungs or modified
swim-bladders betray their aquatic origin, may perhaps be thus
accounted for. A well-developed tail having been formed in an aquatic
animal, it might subsequently come to be worked in for all sorts of
purposes, as a fly-flapper, an organ of prehension, or as an aid in
turning, as with the dog, though the aid must be slight, for the hare,
with hardly any tail, can double quickly enough.
In the second place, we may sometimes attribute importance to
characters which are really of very little importance, and which have
originated from quite secondary causes, independently of natural
selection. We should remember that climate, food, &c., probably
have some little direct influence on the organisation; that characters
reappear from the law of reversion;, that correlation of growth will
have had a most important influence in modifying various structures;
and finally, that sexual selection will often have largely modified
the external characters of animals having a will, to give one male an
advantage in fighting with another or in charming the females.
Moreover when a modification of structure has primarily arisen from
the above or other unknown causes, it may at first have been of no
advantage to the species, but may subsequently have been taken
advantage of by the descendants of the species under new conditions of
life and with newly acquired habits.
To give a few instances to illustrate these latter remarks. If green
woodpeckers alone had existed, and we did not know that there were
many black and pied kinds, I dare say that we should have thought that
the green colour was a beautiful adaptation to hide this
tree-frequenting bird from its enemies; and consequently that it was a
character of importance and might have been acquired through natural
selection; as it is, I have no doubt that the colour is due to some
quite distinct cause, probably to sexual selection. A trailing bamboo
in the Malay Archipelago climbs the loftiest trees by the aid of
exquisitely constructed hooks clustered around the ends of the
branches, and this contrivance, no doubt, is of the highest service to
the plant; but as we see nearly similar hooks on many trees which are
not climbers the hooks on the bamboo may have arisen from unknown laws
of growth, and have been subsequently taken advantage of by the plant
undergoing further modification and becoming a climber. The naked skin
on the head of a vulture is generally looked at as a direct adaptation
for wallowing in putridity; and so it may be, or it may possibly be
due to the direct action of putrid matter; but we should be very
cautious in drawing any such inference, when we see that the skin on
the head of the clean-feeding male turkey is likewise naked. The
sutures in the skulls of young mammals have been advanced as a
beautiful adaptation for aiding parturition, and no doubt they
facilitate, or may be indispensable for this act; but as sutures occur
in the skulls of young birds and reptiles, which have only to escape
from a broken egg, we may infer that this structure has arisen from
the laws of growth, and has been taken advantage of in the parturition
of the higher animals.
We are profoundly ignorant of the causes producing slight and
unimportant variations; and we are immediately made conscious of this
by reflecting on the differences in the breeds of our domesticated
animals in different countries, more especially in the less civilized
countries where there has been but little artificial
selection. Careful observers are convinced that a damp climate affects
the growth of the hair, and that with the hair the horns are
correlated. Mountain breeds always differ from lowland breeds; and a
mountainous country would probably affect the hind limbs from
exercising them more, and possibly even the form of the pelvis; and
then by the law of homologous variation, the front limbs and even the
head would probably be affected. The shape, also, of the pelvis might
affect by pressure the shape of the head of the young in the womb. The
laborious breathing necessary in high regions would, we have some
reason to believe, increase the size of the chest; and again
correlation would come into play. Animals kept by savages in different
countries often have to struggle for their own subsistence, and would
be exposed to a certain extent to natural selection, and individuals
with slightly different constitutions would succeed best under
different climates; and there is reason to believe that constitution
and colour are correlated. A good observer, also, states that in
cattle susceptibility to the attacks of flies is correlated with
colour, as is the liability to be poisoned by certain plants; so that
colour would be thus subjected to the action of natural selection.
But we are far too ignorant to speculate on the relative importance of
the several known and unknown laws of variation; and I have here
alluded to them only to show that, if we are unable to account for the
characteristic differences of our domestic breeds, which nevertheless
we generally admit to have arisen through ordinary generation, we
ought not to lay too much stress on our ignorance of the precise cause
of the slight analogous differences between species. I might have
adduced for this same purpose the differences between the races of
man, which are so strongly marked; I may add that some little light
can apparently be thrown on the origin of these differences, chiefly
through sexual selection of a particular kind, but without here
entering on copious details my reasoning would appear frivolous.
The foregoing remarks lead me to say a few words on the protest lately
made by some naturalists, against the utilitarian doctrine that every
detail of structure has been produced for the good of its
possessor. They believe that very many structures have been created
for beauty in the eyes of man, or for mere variety. This doctrine, if
true, would be absolutely fatal to my theory. Yet I fully admit that
many structures are of no direct use to their possessors. Physical
conditions probably have had some little effect on structure, quite
independently of any good thus gained. Correlation of growth has no
doubt played a most important part, and a useful modification of one
part will often have entailed on other parts diversified changes of no
direct use. So again characters which formerly were useful, or which
formerly had arisen from correlation of growth, or from other unknown
cause, may reappear from the law of reversion, though now of no direct
use. The effects of sexual selection, when displayed in beauty to
charm the females, can be called useful only in rather a forced
sense. But by far the most important consideration is that the chief
part of the organisation of every being is simply due to inheritance;
and consequently, though each being assuredly is well fitted for its
place in nature, many structures now have no direct relation to the
habits of life of each species. Thus, we can hardly believe that the
webbed feet of the upland goose or of the frigate-bird are of special
use to these birds; we cannot believe that the same bones in the arm
of the monkey, in the fore leg of the horse, in the wing of the bat,
and in the flipper of the seal, are of special use to these
animals. We may safely attribute these structures to inheritance. But
to the progenitor of the upland goose and of the frigate-bird, webbed
feet no doubt were as useful as they now are to the most aquatic of
existing birds. So we may believe that the progenitor of the seal had
not a flipper, but a foot with five toes fitted for walking or
grasping; and we may further venture to believe that the several bones
in the limbs of the monkey, horse, and bat, which have been inherited
from a common progenitor, were formerly of more special use to that
progenitor, or its progenitors, than they now are to these animals
having such widely diversified habits. Therefore we may infer that
these several bones might have been acquired through natural
selection, subjected formerly, as now, to the several laws of
inheritance, reversion, correlation of growth, &c. Hence every
detail of structure in every living creature (making some little
allowance for the direct action of physical conditions) may be viewed,
either as having been of special use to some ancestral form, or as
being now of special use to the descendants of this form either
directly, or indirectly through the complex laws of growth.
Natural selection cannot possibly produce any modification in any one
species exclusively for the good of another species; though throughout
nature one species incessantly takes advantage of, and profits by, the
structure of another. But natural selection can and does often produce
structures for the direct injury of other species, as we see in the
fang of the adder, and in the ovipositor of the ichneumon, by which
its eggs are deposited in the living bodies of other insects. If it
could be proved that any part of the structure of any one species had
been formed for the exclusive good of another species, it would
annihilate my theory, for such could not have been produced through
natural selection. Although many statements may be found in works on
natural history to this effect, I cannot find even one which seems to
me of any weight. It is admitted that the rattlesnake has a
poison-fang for its own defence and for the destruction of its prey;
but some authors suppose that at the same time this snake is furnished
with a rattle for its own injury, namely, to warn its prey to
escape. I would almost as soon believe that the cat curls the end of
its tail when preparing to spring, in order to warn the doomed
mouse. But I have not space here to enter on this and other such
cases.
Natural selection will never produce in a being anything injurious to
itself, for natural selection acts solely by and for the good of
each. No organ will be formed, as Paley has remarked, for the purpose
of causing pain or for doing an injury to its possessor. If a fair
balance be struck between the good and evil caused by each part, each
will be found on the whole advantageous. After the lapse of time,
under changing conditions of life, if any part comes to be injurious,
it will be modified; or if it be not so, the being will become
extinct, as myriads have become extinct.
Natural selection tends only to make each organic being as perfect as,
or slightly more perfect than, the other inhabitants of the same
country with which it has to struggle for existence. And we see that
this is the degree of perfection attained under nature. The endemic
productions of New Zealand, for instance, are perfect one compared
with another; but they are now rapidly yielding before the advancing
legions of plants and animals introduced from Europe. Natural
selection will not produce absolute perfection, nor do we always meet,
as far as we can judge, with this high standard under nature. The
correction for the aberration of light is said, on high authority, not
to be perfect even in that most perfect organ, the eye. If our reason
leads us to admire with enthusiasm a multitude of inimitable
contrivances in nature, this same reason tells us, though we may
easily err on both sides, that some other contrivances are less
perfect. Can we consider the sting of the wasp or of the bee as
perfect, which, when used against many attacking animals, cannot be
withdrawn, owing to the backward serratures, and so inevitably causes
the death of the insect by tearing out its viscera?
If we look at the sting of the bee, as having originally existed in a
remote progenitor as a boring and serrated instrument, like that in so
many members of the same great order, and which has been modified but
not perfected for its present purpose, with the poison originally
adapted to cause galls subsequently intensified, we can perhaps
understand how it is that the use of the sting should so often cause
the insect's own death: for if on the whole the power of stinging be
useful to the community, it will fulfil all the requirements of
natural selection, though it may cause the death of some few
members. If we admire the truly wonderful power of scent by which the
males of many insects find their females, can we admire the production
for this single purpose of thousands of drones, which are utterly
useless to the community for any other end, and which are ultimately
slaughtered by their industrious and sterile sisters? It may be
difficult, but we ought to admire the savage instinctive hatred of the
queen-bee, which urges her instantly to destroy the young queens her
daughters as soon as born, or to perish herself in the combat; for
undoubtedly this is for the good of the community; and maternal love
or maternal hatred, though the latter fortunately is most rare, is all
the same to the inexorable principle of natural selection. If we
admire the several ingenious contrivances, by which the flowers of the
orchis and of many other plants are fertilised through insect agency,
can we consider as equally perfect the elaboration by our fir-trees of
dense clouds of pollen, in order that a few granules may be wafted by
a chance breeze on to the ovules?
Summary of Chapter. We have in this chapter discussed some of
the difficulties and objections which may be urged against my
theory. Many of them are very grave; but I think that in the
discussion light has been thrown on several facts, which on the theory
of independent acts of creation are utterly obscure. We have seen that
species at any one period are not indefinitely variable, and are not
linked together by a multitude of intermediate gradations, partly
because the process of natural selection will always be very slow, and
will act, at any one time, only on a very few forms; and partly
because the very process of natural selection almost implies the
continual supplanting and extinction of preceding and intermediate
gradations. Closely allied species, now living on a continuous area,
must often have been formed when the area was not continuous, and when
the conditions of life did not insensibly graduate away from one part
to another. When two varieties are formed in two districts of a
continuous area, an intermediate variety will often be formed, fitted
for an intermediate zone; but from reasons assigned, the intermediate
variety will usually exist in lesser numbers than the two forms which
it connects; consequently the two latter, during the course of further
modification, from existing in greater numbers, will have a great
advantage over the less numerous intermediate variety, and will thus
generally succeed in supplanting and exterminating it.
We have seen in this chapter how cautious we should be in concluding
that the most different habits of life could not graduate into each
other; that a bat, for instance, could not have been formed by natural
selection from an animal which at first could only glide through the
air.
We have seen that a species may under new conditions of life change
its habits, or have diversified habits, with some habits very unlike
those of its nearest congeners. Hence we can understand bearing in
mind that each organic being is trying to live wherever it can live,
how it has arisen that there are upland geese with webbed feet, ground
woodpeckers, diving thrushes, and petrels with the habits of auks.
Although the belief that an organ so perfect as the eye could have
been formed by natural selection, is more than enough to stagger any
one; yet in the case of any organ, if we know of a long series of
gradations in complexity, each good for its possessor, then, under
changing conditions of life, there is no logical impossibility in the
acquirement of any conceivable degree of perfection through natural
selection. In the cases in which we know of no intermediate or
transitional states, we should be very cautious in concluding that
none could have existed, for the homologies of many organs and their
intermediate states show that wonderful metamorphoses in function are
at least possible. For instance, a swim-bladder has apparently been
converted into an air-breathing lung. The same organ having performed
simultaneously very different functions, and then having been
specialised for one function; and two very distinct organs having
performed at the same time the same function, the one having been
perfected whilst aided by the other, must often have largely
facilitated transitions.
We are far too ignorant, in almost every case, to be enabled to assert
that any part or organ is so unimportant for the welfare of a species,
that modifications in its structure could not have been slowly
accumulated by means of natural selection. But we may confidently
believe that many modifications, wholly due to the laws of growth, and
at first in no way advantageous to a species, have been subsequently
taken advantage of by the still further modified descendants of this
species. We may, also, believe that a part formerly of high importance
has often been retained (as the tail of an aquatic animal by its
terrestrial descendants), though it has become of such small
importance that it could not, in its present state, have been acquired
by natural selection, a power which acts solely by the preservation of
profitable variations in the struggle for life.
Natural selection will produce nothing in one species for the
exclusive good or injury of another; though it may well produce parts,
organs, and excretions highly useful or even indispensable, or highly
injurious to another species, but in all cases at the same time useful
to the owner. Natural selection in each well-stocked country, must act
chiefly through the competition of the inhabitants one with another,
and consequently will produce perfection, or strength in the battle
for life, only according to the standard of that country. Hence the
inhabitants of one country, generally the smaller one, will often
yield, as we see they do yield, to the inhabitants of another and
generally larger country. For in the larger country there will have
existed more individuals, and more diversified forms, and the
competition will have been severer, and thus the standard of
perfection will have been rendered higher. Natural selection will not
necessarily produce absolute perfection; nor, as far as we can judge
by our limited faculties, can absolute perfection be everywhere
found.
On the theory of natural selection we can clearly understand the full
meaning of that old canon in natural history, 'Natura non facit
saltum.' This canon, if we look only to the present inhabitants of the
world, is not strictly correct, but if we include all those of past
times, it must by my theory be strictly true.
It is generally acknowledged that all organic beings have been formed
on two great laws Unity of Type, and the Conditions of Existence. By
unity of type is meant that fundamental agreement in structure, which
we see in organic beings of the same class, and which is quite
independent of their habits of life. On my theory, unity of type is
explained by unity of descent. The expression of conditions of
existence, so often insisted on by the illustrious Cuvier, is fully
embraced by the principle of natural selection. For natural selection
acts by either now adapting the varying parts of each being to its
organic and inorganic conditions of life; or by having adapted them
during long-past periods of time: the adaptations being aided in some
cases by use and disuse, being slightly affected by the direct action
of the external conditions of life, and being in all cases subjected
to the several laws of growth. Hence, in fact, the law of the
Conditions of Existence is the higher law; as it includes, through the
inheritance of former adaptations, that of Unity of Type.
[ Charles Darwin,
On
the Origin Of Species: A Facsimile of the First Edition,
Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1964, pp. 171-206. ]
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