On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection (1859)
by Charles Darwin
CHAPTER X.
ON THE SUCCESSION OF ORGANIC BEINGS.
On the slow and successive
appearance of new speciesOn their different rates of changeSpecies
once lost do not reappearGroups of species follow the same general
rules in their appearance and disappearance as do single speciesOn
ExtinctionOn simultaneous changes in the forms of life throughout the
worldOn the affinities of extinct species to each other and to living
speciesOn the state of development of ancient formsOn the
succession of the same types within the same areasSummary of preceding
and present chapters.


ET us now see whether
the several facts and rules relating to the geological succession of
organic beings, better accord with the common view of the immutability
of species, or with that of their slow and gradual modification, through
descent and natural selection.
New species have appeared very slowly, one after another, both on the
land and in the waters. Lyell has shown that it is hardly possible to
resist the evidence on this head in the case of the several tertiary
stages; and every year tends to fill up the blanks between them, and
to make the percentage system of lost and new forms more gradual. In
some of the most recent beds, though undoubtedly of high antiquity if
measured by years, only one or two species are lost forms, and only
one or two are new forms, having here appeared for the first time,
either locally, or, as far as we know, on the face of the earth. If we
may trust the observations of Philippi in Sicily, the successive
changes in the marine inhabitants of that island have been many and
most gradual. The secondary formations are more broken; but, as Bronn
has remarked, neither the appearance nor disappearance of their many
now extinct species has been simultaneous in each separate formation.
Species of different genera and classes have not changed at the same
rate, or in the same degree. In the oldest tertiary beds a few living
shells may still be found in the midst of a multitude of extinct
forms. Falconer has given a striking instance of a similar fact, in an
existing crocodile associated with many strange and lost mammals and
reptiles in the sub-Himalayan deposits. The Silurian Lingula differs
but little from the living species of this genus; whereas most of the
other Silurian Molluscs and all the Crustaceans have changed
greatly. The productions of the land seem to change at a quicker rate
than those of the sea, of which a striking instance has lately been
observed in Switzerland. There is some reason to believe that
organisms, considered high in the scale of nature, change more quickly
than those that are low: though there are exceptions to this rule. The
amount of organic change, as Pictet has remarked, does not strictly
correspond with the succession of our geological formations; so that
between each two consecutive formations, the forms of life have seldom
changed in exactly the same degree. Yet if we compare any but the most
closely related formations, all the species will be found to have
undergone some change. When a species has once disappeared from the
face of the earth, we have reason to believe that the same identical
form never reappears. The strongest apparent exception to this latter
rule, is that of the so-called `colonies' of M. Barrande, which
intrude for a period in the midst of an older formation, and then
allow the pre-existing fauna to reappear; but Lyell's explanation,
namely, that it is a case of temporary migration from a distinct
geographical province, seems to me satisfactory.
These several facts accord well with my theory. I believe in no fixed
law of development, causing all the inhabitants of a country to change
abruptly, or simultaneously, or to an equal degree. The process of
modification must be extremely slow. The variability of each species
is quite independent of that of all others. Whether such variability
be taken advantage of by natural selection, and whether the variations
be accumulated to a greater or lesser amount, thus causing a greater
or lesser amount of modification in the varying species, depends on
many complex contingencies, on the variability being of a beneficial
nature, on the power of intercrossing, on the rate of breeding, on the
slowly changing physical conditions of the country, and more
especially on the nature of the other inhabitants with which the
varying species comes into competition. Hence it is by no means
surprising that one species should retain the same identical form much
longer than others; or, if changing, that it should change less. We
see the same fact in geographical distribution; for instance, in the
land-shells and coleopterous insects of Madeira having come to differ
considerably from their nearest allies on the continent of Europe,
whereas the marine shells and birds have remained unaltered. We can
perhaps understand the apparently quicker rate of change in
terrestrial and in more highly organised productions compared with
marine and lower productions, by the more complex relations of the
higher beings to their organic and inorganic conditions of life, as
explained in a former chapter. When many of the inhabitants of a
country have become modified and improved, we can understand, on the
principle of competition, and on that of the many all-important
relations of organism to organism, that any form which does not become
in some degree modified and improved, will be liable to be
exterminated. Hence we can see why all the species in the same region
do at last, if we look to wide enough intervals of time, become
modified; for those which do not change will become extinct.
In members of the same class the average amount of change, during long
and equal periods of time, may, perhaps, be nearly the same; but as
the accumulation of long-enduring fossiliferous formations depends on
great masses of sediment having been deposited on areas whilst
subsiding, our formations have been almost necessarily accumulated at
wide and irregularly intermittent intervals; consequently the amount
of organic change exhibited by the fossils embedded in consecutive
formations is not equal. Each formation, on this view, does not mark a
new and complete act of creation, but only an occasional scene, taken
almost at hazard, in a slowly changing drama.
We can clearly understand why a species when once lost should never
reappear, even if the very same conditions of life, organic and
inorganic, should recur. For though the offspring of one species might
be adapted (and no doubt this has occurred in innumerable instances)
to fill the exact place of another species in the economy of nature,
and thus supplant it; yet the two forms the old and the new would not
be identically the same; for both would almost certainly inherit
different characters from their distinct progenitors. For instance, it
is just possible, if our fantail-pigeons were all destroyed, that
fanciers, by striving during long ages for the same object, might make
a new breed hardly distinguishable from our present fantail; but if
the parent rock-pigeon were also destroyed, and in nature we have
every reason to believe that the parent-form will generally be
supplanted and exterminated by its improved offspring, it is quite
incredible that a fantail, identical with the existing breed, could be
raised from any other species of pigeon, or even from the other
well-established races of the domestic pigeon, for the newly-formed
fantail would be almost sure to inherit from its new progenitor some
slight characteristic differences.
Groups of species, that is, genera and families, follow the same
general rules in their appearance and disappearance as do single
species, changing more or less quickly, and in a greater or lesser
degree. A group does not reappear after it has once disappeared; or
its existence, as long as it lasts, is continuous. I am aware that
there are some apparent exceptions to this rule, but the exceptions
are surprisingly few, so few, that E. Forbes, Pictet, and Woodward
(though all strongly opposed to such views as I maintain) admit its
truth; and the rule strictly accords with my theory. For as all the
species of the same group have descended from some one species, it is
clear that as long as any species of the group have appeared in the
long succession of ages, so long must its members have continuously
existed, in order to have generated either new and modified or the
same old and unmodified forms. Species of the genus Lingula, for
instance, must have continuously existed by an unbroken succession of
generations, from the lowest Silurian stratum to the present day.
We have seen in the last chapter that the species of a group sometimes
falsely appear to have come in abruptly; and I have attempted to give
an explanation of this fact, which if true would have been fatal to my
views. But such cases are certainly exceptional; the general rule
being a gradual increase in number, till the group reaches its
maximum, and then, sooner or later, it gradually decreases. If the
number of the species of a genus, or the number of the genera of a
family, be represented by a vertical line of varying thickness,
crossing the successive geological formations in which the species are
found, the line will sometimes falsely appear to begin at its lower
end, not in a sharp point, but abruptly; it then gradually thickens
upwards, sometimes keeping for a space of equal thickness, and
ultimately thins out in the upper beds, marking the decrease and final
extinction of the species. This gradual increase in number of the
species of a group is strictly conformable with my theory; as the
species of the same genus, and the genera of the same family, can
increase only slowly and progressively; for the process of
modification and the production of a number of allied forms must be
slow and gradual, one species giving rise first to two or three
varieties, these being slowly converted into species, which in their
turn produce by equally slow steps other species, and so on, like the
branching of a great tree from a single stem, till the group becomes
large.
On Extinction.We
have as yet spoken only incidentally of the disappearance of
species and of groups of species. On the theory of natural selection
the extinction of old forms and the production of new and improved
forms are intimately connected together. The old notion of all the
inhabitants of the earth having been swept away at successive periods
by catastrophes, is very generally given up, even by those geologists,
as Elie de Beaumont, Murchison, Barrande, &c., whose general views
would naturally lead them to this conclusion. On the contrary, we have
every reason to believe, from the study of the tertiary formations,
that species and groups of species gradually disappear, one after
another, first from one spot, then from another, and finally from the
world. Both single species and whole groups of species last for very
unequal periods; some groups, as we have seen, having endured from the
earliest known dawn of life to the present day; some having
disappeared before the close of the palaeozoic period. No fixed law
seems to determine the length of time during which any single species
or any single genus endures. There is reason to believe that the
complete extinction of the species of a group is generally a slower
process than their production: if the appearance and disappearance of
a group of species be represented, as before, by a vertical line of
varying thickness, the line is found to taper more gradually at its
upper end, which marks the progress of extermination, than at its
lower end, which marks the first appearance and increase in numbers of
the species. In some cases, however, the extermination of whole groups
of beings, as of ammonites towards the close of the secondary period,
has been wonderfully sudden.
The whole subject of the extinction of species has been involved in
the most gratuitous mystery. Some authors have even supposed that as
the individual has a definite length of life, so have species a
definite duration. No one I think can have marvelled more at the
extinction of species, than I have done. When I found in La Plata the
tooth of a horse embedded with the remains of Mastodon, Megatherium,
Toxodon, and other extinct monsters, which all co-existed with still
living shells at a very late geological period, I was filled with
astonishment; for seeing that the horse, since its introduction by the
Spaniards into South America, has run wild over the whole country and
has increased in numbers at an unparalleled rate, I asked myself what
could so recently have exterminated the former horse under conditions
of life apparently so favourable. But how utterly groundless was my
astonishment! Professor Owen soon perceived that the tooth, though so
like that of the existing horse, belonged to an extinct species. Had
this horse been still living, but in some degree rare, no naturalist
would have felt the least surprise at its rarity; for rarity is the
attribute of a vast number of species of all classes, in all
countries. If we ask ourselves why this or that species is rare, we
answer that something is unfavourable in its conditions of life; but
what that something is, we can hardly ever tell. On the supposition of
the fossil horse still existing as a rare species, we might have felt
certain from the analogy of all other mammals, even of the
slow-breeding elephant, and from the history of the naturalisation of
the domestic horse in South America, that under more favourable
conditions it would in a very few years have stocked the whole
continent. But we could not have told what the unfavourable
conditions were which checked its increase, whether some one or
several contingencies, and at what period of the horse's life, and in
what degree, they severally acted. If the conditions had gone on,
however slowly, becoming less and less favourable, we assuredly should
not have perceived the fact, yet the fossil horse would certainly have
become rarer and rarer, and finally extinct; its place being seized on
by some more successful competitor.
It is most difficult always to remember that the increase of every
living being is constantly being checked by unperceived injurious
agencies; and that these same unperceived agencies are amply
sufficient to cause rarity, and finally extinction. We see in many
cases in the more recent tertiary formations, that rarity precedes
extinction; and we know that this has been the progress of events with
those animals which have been exterminated, either locally or wholly,
through man's agency. I may repeat what I published in 1845, namely,
that to admit that species generally become rare before they become
extinct to feel no surprise at the rarity of a species, and yet to
marvel greatly when it ceases to exist, is much the same as to admit
that sickness in the individual is the forerunner of death to feel no
surprise at sickness, but when the sick man dies, to wonder and to
suspect that he died by some unknown deed of violence.
The theory of natural selection is grounded on the belief that each
new variety, and ultimately each new species, is produced and
maintained by having some advantage over those with which it comes
into competition; and the consequent extinction of less-favoured forms
almost inevitably follows. It is the same with our domestic
productions: when a new and slightly improved variety has been raised,
it at first supplants the less improved varieties in the same
neighbourhood; when much improved it is transported far and near, like
our short-horn cattle, and takes the place of other breeds in other
countries. Thus the appearance of new forms and the disappearance of
old forms, both natural and artificial, are bound together. In certain
flourishing groups, the number of new specific forms which have been
produced within a given time is probably greater than that of the old
forms which have been exterminated; but we know that the number of
species has not gone on indefinitely increasing, at least during the
later geological periods, so that looking to later times we may
believe that the production of new forms has caused the extinction of
about the same number of old forms.
The competition will generally be most severe, as formerly explained
and illustrated by examples, between the forms which are most like
each other in all respects. Hence the improved and modified
descendants of a species will generally cause the extermination of the
parent-species; and if many new forms have been developed from any one
species, the nearest allies of that species, i.e. the species
of the same genus, will be the most liable to extermination. Thus, as
I believe, a number of new species descended from one species, that is
a new genus, comes to supplant an old genus, belonging to the same
family. But it must often have happened that a new species belonging
to some one group will have seized on the place occupied by a species
belonging to a distinct group, and thus caused its extermination; and
if many allied forms be developed from the successful intruder, many
will have to yield their places; and it will generally be allied
forms, which will suffer from some inherited inferiority in common.
But whether it be species belonging to the same or to a distinct
class, which yield their places to other species which have been
modified and improved, a few of the sufferers may often long be
preserved, from being fitted to some peculiar line of life, or from
inhabiting some distant and isolated station, where they have escaped
severe competition. For instance, a single species of Trigonia, a
great genus of shells in the secondary formations, survives in the
Australian seas; and a few members of the great and almost extinct
group of Ganoid fishes still inhabit our fresh waters. Therefore the
utter extinction of a group is generally, as we have seen, a slower
process than its production.
With respect to the apparently sudden extermination of whole families
or orders, as of Trilobites at the close of the palaeozoic period and
of Ammonites at the close of the secondary period, we must remember
what has been already said on the probable wide intervals of time
between our consecutive formations; and in these intervals there may
have been much slow extermination. Moreover, when by sudden
immigration or by unusually rapid development, many species of a new
group have taken possession of a new area, they will have exterminated
in a correspondingly rapid manner many of the old inhabitants; and the
forms which thus yield their places will commonly be allied, for they
will partake of some inferiority in common.
Thus, as it seems to me, the manner in which single species and whole
groups of species become extinct, accords well with the theory of
natural selection. We need not marvel at extinction; if we must
marvel, let it be at our presumption in imagining for a moment that we
understand the many complex contingencies, on which the existence of
each species depends. If we forget for an instant, that each species
tends to increase inordinately, and that some check is always in
action, yet seldom perceived by us, the whole economy of nature will
be utterly obscured. Whenever we can precisely say why this species is
more abundant in individuals than that; why this species and not
another can be naturalised in a given country; then, and not till
then, we may justly feel surprise why we cannot account for the
extinction of this particular species or group of species.
On the Forms of Life changing almost
simultaneously throughout the World.Scarcely
any palaeontological discovery is more striking than the
fact, that the forms of life change almost simultaneously throughout
the world. Thus our European Chalk formation can be recognised in many
distant parts of the world, under the most different climates, where
not a fragment of the mineral chalk itself can be found; namely, in
North America, in equatorial South America, in Tierra del Fuego, at
the Cape of Good Hope, and in the peninsula of India. For at these
distant points, the organic remains in certain beds present an
unmistakeable degree of resemblance to those of the Chalk. It is not
that the same species are met with; for in some cases not one species
is identically the same, but they belong to the same families, genera,
and sections of genera, and sometimes are similarly characterised in
such trifling points as mere superficial sculpture. Moreover other
forms, which are not found in the Chalk of Europe, but which occur in
the formations either above or below, are similarly absent at these
distant points of the world. In the several successive palaeozoic
formations of Russia, Western Europe and North America, a similar
parallelism in the forms of life has been observed by several authors:
so it is, according to Lyell, with the several European and North
American tertiary deposits. Even if the few fossil species which are
common to the Old and New Worlds be kept wholly out of view, the
general parallelism in the successive forms of life, in the stages of
the widely separated palaeozoic and tertiary periods, would still be
manifest, and the several formations could be easily correlated.
These observations, however, relate to the marine inhabitants of
distant parts of the world: we have not sufficient data to judge
whether the productions of the land and of fresh water change at
distant points in the same parallel manner. We may doubt whether they
have thus changed: if the Megatherium, Mylodon, Macrauchenia, and
Toxodon had been brought to Europe from La Plata, without any
information in regard to their geological position, no one would have
suspected that they had coexisted with still living sea-shells; but as
these anomalous monsters coexisted with the Mastodon and Horse, it
might at least have been inferred that they had lived during one of
the latter tertiary stages.
When the marine forms of life are spoken of as having changed
simultaneously throughout the world, it must not be supposed that this
expression relates to the same thousandth or hundred-thousandth year,
or even that it has a very strict geological sense; for if all the
marine animals which live at the present day in Europe, and all those
that lived in Europe during the pleistocene period (an enormously
remote period as measured by years, including the whole glacial
epoch), were to be compared with those now living in South America or
in Australia, the most skilful naturalist would hardly be able to say
whether the existing or the pleistocene inhabitants of Europe
resembled most closely those of the southern hemisphere. So, again,
several highly competent observers believe that the existing
productions of the United States are more closely related to those
which lived in Europe during certain later tertiary stages, than to
those which now live here; and if this be so, it is evident that
fossiliferous beds deposited at the present day on the shores of North
America would hereafter be liable to be classed with somewhat older
European beds. Nevertheless, looking to a remotely future epoch, there
can, I think, be little doubt that all the more modern marine
formations, namely, the upper pliocene, the pleistocene and strictly
modern beds, of Europe, North and South America, and Australia, from
containing fossil remains in some degree allied, and from not
including those forms which are only found in the older underlying
deposits, would be correctly ranked as simultaneous in a geological
sense.
The fact of the forms of life changing simultaneously, in the above
large sense, at distant parts of the world, has greatly struck those
admirable observers, MM. de Verneuil and d'Archiac. After referring to
the parallelism of the palaeozoic forms of life in various parts of
Europe, they add, `If struck by this strange sequence, we turn our
attention to North America, and there discover a series of analogous
phenomena, it will appear certain that all these modifications of
species, their extinction, and the introduction of new ones, cannot be
owing to mere changes in marine currents or other causes more or less
local and temporary, but depend on general laws which govern the whole
animal kingdom.' M. Barrande has made forcible remarks to precisely
the same effect. It is, indeed, quite futile to look to changes of
currents, climate, or other physical conditions, as the cause of these
great mutations in the forms of life throughout the world, under the
most different climates. We must, as Barrande has remarked, look to
some special law. We shall see this more clearly when we treat of the
present distribution of organic beings, and find how slight is the
relation between the physical conditions of various countries, and the
nature of their inhabitants.
This great fact of the parallel succession of the forms of life
throughout the world, is explicable on the theory of natural
selection. New species are formed by new varieties arising, which have
some advantage over older forms; and those forms, which are already
dominant, or have some advantage over the other forms in their own
country, would naturally oftenest give rise to new varieties or
incipient species; for these latter must be victorious in a still
higher degree in order to be preserved and to survive. We have
distinct evidence on this head, in the plants which are dominant, that
is, which are commonest in their own homes, and are most widely
diffused, having produced the greatest number of new varieties. It is
also natural that the dominant, varying, and far-spreading species,
which already have invaded to a certain extent the territories of
other species, should be those which would have the best chance of
spreading still further, and of giving rise in new countries to new
varieties and species. The process of diffusion may often be very
slow, being dependent on climatal and geographical changes, or on
strange accidents, but in the long run the dominant forms will
generally succeed in spreading. The diffusion would, it is probable,
be slower with the terrestrial inhabitants of distinct continents than
with the marine inhabitants of the continuous sea. We might therefore
expect to find, as we apparently do find, a less strict degree of
parallel succession in the productions of the land than of the sea.
Dominant species spreading from any region might encounter still more
dominant species, and then their triumphant course, or even their
existence, would cease. We know not at all precisely what are all the
conditions most favourable for the multiplication of new and dominant
species; but we can, I think, clearly see that a number of
individuals, from giving a better chance of the appearance of
favourable variations, and that severe competition with many already
existing forms, would be highly favourable, as would be the power of
spreading into new territories. A certain amount of isolation,
recurring at long intervals of time, would probably be also
favourable, as before explained. One quarter of the world may have
been most favourable for the production of new and dominant species on
the land, and another for those in the waters of the sea. If two great
regions had been for a long period favourably circumstanced in an
equal degree, whenever their inhabitants met, the battle would be
prolonged and severe; and some from one birthplace and some from the
other might be victorious. But in the course of time, the forms
dominant in the highest degree, wherever produced, would tend
everywhere to prevail. As they prevailed, they would cause the
extinction of other and inferior forms; and as these inferior forms
would be allied in groups by inheritance, whole groups would tend
slowly to disappear; though here and there a single member might long
be enabled to survive.
Thus, as it seems to me, the parallel, and, taken in a large sense,
simultaneous, succession of the same forms of life throughout the
world, accords well with the principle of new species having been
formed by dominant species spreading widely and varying; the new
species thus produced being themselves dominant owing to inheritance,
and to having already had some advantage over their parents or over
other species; these again spreading, varying, and producing new
species. The forms which are beaten and which yield their places to
the new and victorious forms, will generally be allied in groups, from
inheriting some inferiority in common; and therefore as new and
improved groups spread throughout the world, old groups will disappear
from the world; and the succession of forms in both ways will
everywhere tend to correspond.
There is one other remark connected with this subject worth making. I
have given my reasons for believing that all our greater fossiliferous
formations were deposited during periods of subsidence; and that blank
intervals of vast duration occurred during the periods when the bed of
the sea was either stationary or rising, and likewise when sediment
was not thrown down quickly enough to embed and preserve organic
remains. During these long and blank intervals I suppose that the
inhabitants of each region underwent a considerable amount of
modification and extinction, and that there was much migration from
other parts of the world. As we have reason to believe that large
areas are affected by the same movement, it is probable that strictly
contemporaneous formations have often been accumulated over very wide
spaces in the same quarter of the world; but we are far from having
any right to conclude that this has invariably been the case, and that
large areas have invariably been affected by the same movements. When
two formations have been deposited in two regions during nearly, but
not exactly the same period, we should find in both, from the causes
explained in the foregoing paragraphs, the same general succession in
the forms of life; but the species would not exactly correspond; for
there will have been a little more time in the one region than in the
other for modification, extinction, and immigration.
I suspect that cases of this nature have occurred in Europe. Mr.
Prestwich, in his admirable Memoirs on the eocene deposits of England
and France, is able to draw a close general parallelism between the
successive stages in the two countries; but when he compares certain
stages in England with those in France, although he finds in both a
curious accordance in the numbers of the species belonging to the same
genera, yet the species themselves differ in a manner very difficult
to account for, considering the proximity of the two areas, unless,
indeed, it be assumed that an isthmus separated two seas inhabited by
distinct, but contemporaneous, faunas. Lyell has made similar
observations on some of the later tertiary formations. Barrande,
also, shows that there is a striking general parallelism in the
successive Silurian deposits of Bohemia and Scandinavia; nevertheless
he finds a surprising amount of difference in the species. If the
several formations in these regions have not been deposited during the
same exact periods, a formation in one region often corresponding with
a blank interval in the other, and if in both regions the species have
gone on slowly changing during the accumulation of the several
formations and during the long intervals of time between them; in this
case, the several formations in the two regions could be arranged in
the same order, in accordance with the general succession of the form
of life, and the order would falsely appear to be strictly parallel;
nevertheless the species would not all be the same in the apparently
corresponding stages in the two regions.
On the Affinities of extinct
Species to each other, and to living forms.Let
us now look to the mutual affinities of extinct and living
species. They all fall into one grand natural system; and this fact is
at once explained on the principle of descent. The more ancient any
form is, the more, as a general rule, it differs from living forms.
But, as Buckland long ago remarked, all fossils can be classed either
in still existing groups, or between them. That the extinct forms of
life help to fill up the wide intervals between existing genera,
families, and orders, cannot be disputed. For if we confine our
attention either to the living or to the extinct alone, the series is
far less perfect than if we combine both into one general system. With
respect to the Vertebrata, whole pages could be filled with striking
illustrations from our great palaeontologist, Owen, showing how
extinct animals fall in between existing groups. Cuvier ranked the
Ruminants and Pachyderms, as the two most distinct orders of mammals;
but Owen has discovered so many fossil links, that he has had to alter
the whole classification of these two orders; and has placed certain
pachyderms in the same sub-order with ruminants: for example, he
dissolves by fine gradations the apparently wide difference between
the pig and the camel. In regard to the Invertebrata, Barrande, and a
higher authority could not be named, asserts that he is every day
taught that palaeozoic animals, though belonging to the same orders,
families, or genera with those living at the present day, were not at
this early epoch limited in such distinct groups as they now are.
Some writers have objected to any extinct species or group of species
being considered as intermediate between living species or groups. If
by this term it is meant that an extinct form is directly intermediate
in all its characters between two living forms, the objection is
probably valid. But I apprehend that in a perfectly natural
classification many fossil species would have to stand between living
species, and some extinct genera between living genera, even between
genera belonging to distinct families. The most common case,
especially with respect to very distinct groups, such as fish and
reptiles, seems to be, that supposing them to be distinguished at the
present day from each other by a dozen characters, the ancient members
of the same two groups would be distinguished by a somewhat lesser
number of characters, so that the two groups, though formerly quite
distinct, at that period made some small approach to each other.
It is a common belief that the more ancient a form is, by so much the
more it tends to connect by some of its characters groups now widely
separated from each other. This remark no doubt must be restricted to
those groups which have undergone much change in the course of
geological ages; and it would be difficult to prove the truth of the
proposition, for every now and then even a living animal, as the
Lepidosiren, is discovered having affinities directed towards very
distinct groups. Yet if we compare the older Reptiles and Batrachians,
the older Fish, the older Cephalopods, and the eocene Mammals, with
the more recent members of the same classes, we must admit that there
is some truth in the remark.
Let us see how far these several facts and inferences accord with the
theory of descent with modification. As the subject is somewhat
complex, I must request the reader to turn to the diagram in the
fourth chapter. We may suppose that the numbered letters represent
genera, and the dotted lines diverging from them the species in each
genus. The diagram is much too simple, too few genera and too few
species being given, but this is unimportant for us. The horizontal
lines may represent successive geological formations, and all the
forms beneath the uppermost line may be considered as extinct. The
three existing genera, a14, q14, p14, will form a
small family; b14 and f14 a closely allied family or
sub-family; and o14, e14, m14, a third
family. These three families, together with the many extinct genera on
the several lines of descent diverging from the parent-form A, will
form an order; for all will have inherited something in common from
their ancient and common progenitor. On the principle of the
continued tendency to divergence of character, which was formerly
illustrated by this diagram, the more recent any form is, the more it
will generally differ from its ancient progenitor. Hence we can
understand the rule that the most ancient fossils differ most from
existing forms. We must not, however, assume that divergence of
character is a necessary contingency; it depends solely on the
descendants from a species being thus enabled to seize on many and
different places in the economy of nature. Therefore it is quite
possible, as we have seen in the case of some Silurian forms, that a
species might go on being slightly modified in relation to its
slightly altered conditions of life, and yet retain throughout a vast
period the same general characteristics. This is represented in the
diagram by the letter F14.
All the many forms, extinct and recent, descended from A, make, as
before remarked, one order; and this order, from the continued effects
of extinction and divergence of character, has become divided into
several sub-families and families, some of which are supposed to have
perished at different periods, and some to have endured to the present
day.
By looking at the diagram we can see that if many of the extinct
forms, supposed to be embedded in the successive formations, were
discovered at several points low down in the series, the three
existing families on the uppermost line would be rendered less
distinct from each other. If, for instance, the genera a1,
a5, a10, m3, m6, m9 were
disinterred, these three families would be so closely linked together
that they probably would have to be united into one great family, in
nearly the same manner as has occurred with ruminants and
pachyderms. Yet he who objected to call the extinct genera, which thus
linked the living genera of three families together, intermediate in
character, would be justified, as they are intermediate, not directly,
but only by a long and circuitous course through many widely different
forms. If many extinct forms were to be discovered above one of the
middle horizontal lines or geological formations for instance, above
No. VI. but none from beneath this line, then only the two families
on the left hand (namely, a14, &c., and b14,
&c.) would have to be united into one family; and the two other
families (namely, a14 to f14 now including five genera,
and o14 to m14) would yet remain distinct. These two
families, however, would be less distinct from each other than they
were before the discovery of the fossils. If, for instance, we suppose
the existing genera of the two families to differ from each other by a
dozen characters, in this case the genera, at the early period marked
VI., would differ by a lesser number of characters; for at this early
stage of descent they have not diverged in character from the common
progenitor of the order, nearly so much as they subsequently diverged.
Thus it comes that ancient and extinct genera are often in some slight
degree intermediate in character between their modified descendants,
or between their collateral relations.
In nature the case will be far more complicated than is represented in
the diagram; for the groups will have been more numerous, they will
have endured for extremely unequal lengths of time, and will have been
modified in various degrees. As we possess only the last volume of the
geological record, and that in a very broken condition, we have no
right to expect, except in very rare cases, to fill up wide intervals
in the natural system, and thus unite distinct families or orders.
All that we have a right to expect, is that those groups, which have
within known geological periods undergone much modification, should in
the older formations make some slight approach to each other; so that
the older members should differ less from each other in some of their
characters than do the existing members of the same groups; and this
by the concurrent evidence of our best palaeontologists seems
frequently to be the case.
Thus, on the theory of descent with modification, the main facts with
respect to the mutual affinities of the extinct forms of life to each
other and to living forms, seem to me explained in a satisfactory
manner. And they are wholly inexplicable on any other view.
On this same theory, it is evident that the fauna of any great period
in the earth's history will be intermediate in general character
between that which preceded and that which succeeded it. Thus, the
species which lived at the sixth great stage of descent in the diagram
are the modified offspring of those which lived at the fifth stage,
and are the parents of those which became still more modified at the
seventh stage; hence they could hardly fail to be nearly intermediate
in character between the forms of life above and below. We must,
however, allow for the entire extinction of some preceding forms, and
for the coming in of quite new forms by immigration, and for a large
amount of modification, during the long and blank intervals between
the successive formations. Subject to these allowances, the fauna of
each geological period undoubtedly is intermediate in character,
between the preceding and succeeding faunas. I need give only one
instance, namely, the manner in which the fossils of the Devonian
system, when this system was first discovered, were at once recognised
by palaeontologists as intermediate in character between those of the
overlying carboniferous, and underlying Silurian system. But each
fauna is not necessarily exactly intermediate, as unequal intervals of
time have elapsed between consecutive formations.
It is no real objection to the truth of the statement, that the fauna
of each period as a whole is nearly intermediate in character between
the preceding and succeeding faunas, that certain genera offer
exceptions to the rule. For instance, mastodons and elephants, when
arranged by Dr Falconer in two series, first according to their mutual
affinities and then according to their periods of existence, do not
accord in arrangement. The species extreme in character are not the
oldest, or the most recent; nor are those which are intermediate in
character, intermediate in age. But supposing for an instant, in this
and other such cases, that the record of the first appearance and
disappearance of the species was perfect, we have no reason to believe
that forms successively produced necessarily endure for corresponding
lengths of time: a very ancient form might occasionally last much
longer than a form elsewhere subsequently produced, especially in the
case of terrestrial productions inhabiting separated districts. To
compare small things with great: if the principal living and extinct
races of the domestic pigeon were arranged as well as they could be in
serial affinity, this arrangement would not closely accord with the
order in time of their production, and still less with the order of
their disappearance; for the parent rock-pigeon now lives; and many
varieties between the rock-pigeon and the carrier have become extinct;
and carriers which are extreme in the important character of length of
beak originated earlier than short-beaked tumblers, which are at the
opposite end of the series in this same respect.
Closely connected with the statement, that the organic remains from an
intermediate formation are in some degree intermediate in character,
is the fact, insisted on by all palaeontologists, that fossils from
two consecutive formations are far more closely related to each other,
than are the fossils from two remote formations. Pictet gives as a
well-known instance, the general resemblance of the organic remains
from the several stages of the chalk formation, though the species are
distinct in each stage. This fact alone, from its generality, seems
to have shaken Professor Pictet in his firm belief in the immutability
of species. He who is acquainted with the distribution of existing
species over the globe, will not attempt to account for the close
resemblance of the distinct species in closely consecutive formations,
by the physical conditions of the ancient areas having remained nearly
the same. Let it be remembered that the forms of life, at least those
inhabiting the sea, have changed almost simultaneously throughout the
world, and therefore under the most different climates and
conditions. Consider the prodigious vicissitudes of climate during the
pleistocene period, which includes the whole glacial period, and note
how little the specific forms of the inhabitants of the sea have been
affected.
On the theory of descent, the full meaning of the fact of fossil
remains from closely consecutive formations, though ranked as distinct
species, being closely related, is obvious. As the accumulation of
each formation has often been interrupted, and as long blank intervals
have intervened between successive formations, we ought not to expect
to find, as I attempted to show in the last chapter, in any one or two
formations all the intermediate varieties between the species which
appeared at the commencement and close of these periods; but we ought
to find after intervals, very long as measured by years, but only
moderately long as measured geologically, closely allied forms, or, as
they have been called by some authors, representative species; and
these we assuredly do find. We find, in short, such evidence of the
slow and scarcely sensible mutation of specific forms, as we have a
just right to expect to find.
On the state of Development of Ancient
Forms.There has been much discussion whether recent forms are
more highly developed than ancient. I will not here enter on this subject,
for naturalists have not as yet defined to each other's satisfaction what
is meant by high and low forms. But in one particular sense the more
recent forms must, on my theory, be higher than the more ancient; for
each new species is formed by having had some advantage in the
struggle for life over other and preceding forms. If under a nearly
similar climate, the eocene inhabitants of one quarter of the world
were put into competition with the existing inhabitants of the same or
some other quarter, the eocene fauna or flora would certainly be
beaten and exterminated; as would a secondary fauna by an eocene, and
a palaeozoic fauna by a secondary fauna. I do not doubt that this
process of improvement has affected in a marked and sensible manner
the organisation of the more recent and victorious forms of life, in
comparison with the ancient and beaten forms; but I can see no way of
testing this sort of progress. Crustaceans, for instance, not the
highest in their own class, may have beaten the highest molluscs. From
the extraordinary manner in which European productions have recently
spread over New Zealand, and have seized on places which must have
been previously occupied, we may believe, if all the animals and
plants of Great Britain were set free in New Zealand, that in the
course of time a multitude of British forms would become thoroughly
naturalized there, and would exterminate many of the natives. On the
other hand, from what we see now occurring in New Zealand, and from
hardly a single inhabitant of the southern hemisphere having become
wild in any part of Europe, we may doubt, if all the productions of
New Zealand were set free in Great Britain, whether any considerable
number would be enabled to seize on places now occupied by our native
plants and animals. Under this point of view, the productions of
Great Britain, may be said to be higher than those of New Zealand. Yet
the most skilful naturalist from an examination of the species of the
two countries could not have foreseen this result.
Agassiz insists that ancient animals resemble to a certain extent the
embryos of recent animals of the same classes; or that the geological
succession of extinct forms is in some degree parallel to the
embryological development of recent forms. I must follow Pictet and
Huxley in thinking that the truth of this doctrine is very far from
proved. Yet I fully expect to see it hereafter confirmed, at least in
regard to subordinate groups, which have branched off from each other
within comparatively recent times. For this doctrine of Agassiz
accords well with the theory of natural selection. In a future chapter
I shall attempt to show that the adult differs from its embryo, owing
to variations supervening at a not early age, and being inherited at a
corresponding age. This process, whilst it leaves the embryo almost
unaltered, continually adds, in the course of successive generations,
more and more difference to the adult.
Thus the embryo comes to be left as a sort of picture, preserved by
nature, of the ancient and less modified condition of each animal.
This view may be true, and yet it may never be capable of full proof.
Seeing, for instance, that the oldest known mammals, reptiles, and
fish strictly belong to their own proper classes, though some of these
old forms are in a slight degree less distinct from each other than
are the typical members of the same groups at the present day, it
would be vain to look for animals having the common embryological
character of the Vertebrata, until beds far beneath the lowest
Silurian strata are discovered a discovery of which the chance is very
small.
On the Succession of the same Types within
the same areas, during the later tertiary periods.Mr.
Clift many years ago showed that the fossil mammals from the
Australian caves were closely allied to the living marsupials of that
continent. In South America, a similar relationship is manifest, even
to an uneducated eye, in the gigantic pieces of armour like those of
the armadillo, found in several parts of La Plata; and Professor Owen
has shown in the most striking manner that most of the fossil mammals,
buried there in such numbers, are related to South American types.
This relationship is even more clearly seen in the wonderful
collection of fossil bones made by MM. Lund and Clausen in the caves
of Brazil. I was so much impressed with these facts that I strongly
insisted, in 1839 and 1845, on this `law of the succession of types,'
on `this wonderful relationship in the same continent between the dead
and the living.' Professor Owen has subsequently extended the same
generalisation to the mammals of the Old World. We see the same law in
this author's restorations of the extinct and gigantic birds of New
Zealand. We see it also in the birds of the caves of Brazil. Mr
Woodward has shown that the same law holds good with sea-shells, but
from the wide distribution of most genera of molluscs, it is not well
displayed by them. Other cases could be added, as the relation between
the extinct and living land-shells of Madeira; and between the extinct
and living brackish-water shells of the Aralo-Caspian Sea.
Now what does this remarkable law of the succession of the same types
within the same areas mean? He would be a bold man, who after
comparing the present climate of Australia and of parts of South
America under the same latitude, would attempt to account, on the one
hand, by dissimilar physical conditions for the dissimilarity of the
inhabitants of these two continents, and, on the other hand, by
similarity of conditions, for the uniformity of the same types in each
during the later tertiary periods. Nor can it be pretended that it is
an immutable law that marsupials should have been chiefly or solely
produced in Australia; or that Edentata and other American types
should have been solely produced in South America. For we know that
Europe in ancient times was peopled by numerous marsupials; and I have
shown in the publications above alluded to, that in America the law of
distribution of terrestrial mammals was formerly different from what
it now is. North America formerly partook strongly of the present
character of the southern half of the continent; and the southern half
was formerly more closely allied, than it is at present, to the
northern half. In a similar manner we know from Falconer and Cautley's
discoveries, that northern India was formerly more closely related in
its mammals to Africa than it is at the present time. Analogous facts
could be given in relation to the distribution of marine animals.
On the theory of descent with modification, the great law of the long
enduring, but not immutable, succession of the same types within the
same areas, is at once explained; for the inhabitants of each quarter
of the world will obviously tend to leave in that quarter, during the
next succeeding period of time, closely allied though in some degree
modified descendants. If the inhabitants of one continent formerly
differed greatly from those of another continent, so will their
modified descendants still differ in nearly the same manner and
degree. But after very long intervals of time and after great
geographical changes, permitting much inter-migration, the feebler
will yield to the more dominant forms, and there will be nothing
immutable in the laws of past and present distribution.
It may be asked in ridicule, whether I suppose that the megatherium
and other allied huge monsters have left behind them in South America
the sloth, armadillo, and anteater, as their degenerate
descendants. This cannot for an instant be admitted. These huge
animals have become wholly extinct, and have left no progeny. But in
the caves of Brazil, there are many extinct species which are closely
allied in size and in other characters to the species still living in
South America; and some of these fossils may be the actual progenitors
of living species. It must not be forgotten that, on my theory, all
the species of the same genus have descended from some one species; so
that if six genera, each having eight species, be found in one
geological formation, and in the next succeeding formation there be
six other allied or representative genera with the same number of
species, then we may conclude that only one species of each of the six
older genera has left modified descendants, constituting the six new
genera. The other seven species of the old genera have all died out
and have left no progeny. Or, which would probably be a far commoner
case, two or three species of two or three alone of the six older
genera will have been the parents of the six new genera; the other old
species and the other whole genera having become utterly extinct. In
failing orders, with the genera and species decreasing in numbers, as
apparently is the case of the Edentata of South America, still fewer
genera and species will have left modified blood-descendants.
Summary of the preceding and present
Chapters.I have attempted to show that the geological record
is extremely imperfect; that only a small portion of the globe has been
geologically explored with care; that only certain classes of organic
beings have been largely preserved in a fossil state; that the number
both of specimens and of species, preserved in our museums, is
absolutely as nothing compared with the incalculable number of
generations which must have passed away even during a single
formation; that, owing to subsidence being necessary for the
accumulation of fossiliferous deposits thick enough to resist future
degradation, enormous intervals of time have elapsed between the
successive formations; that there has probably been more extinction
during the periods of subsidence, and more variation during the
periods of elevation, and during the latter the record will have been
least perfectly kept; that each single formation has not been
continuously deposited; that the duration of each formation is,
perhaps, short compared with the average duration of specific forms;
that migration has played an important part in the first appearance of
new forms in any one area and formation; that widely ranging species
are those which have varied most, and have oftenest given rise to new
species; and that varieties have at first often been local. All these
causes taken conjointly, must have tended to make the geological
record extremely imperfect, and will to a large extent explain why we
do not find interminable varieties, connecting together all the
extinct and existing forms of life by the finest graduated steps.
He who rejects these views on the nature of the geological record,
will rightly reject my whole theory. For he may ask in vain where are
the numberless transitional links which must formerly have connected
the closely allied or representative species, found in the several
stages of the same great formation. He may disbelieve in the enormous
intervals of time which have elapsed between our consecutive
formations; he may overlook how important a part migration must have
played, when the formations of any one great region alone, as that of
Europe, are considered; he may urge the apparent, but often falsely
apparent, sudden coming in of whole groups of species. He may ask
where are the remains of those infinitely numerous organisms which
must have existed long before the first bed of the Silurian system was
deposited: I can answer this latter question only hypothetically, by
saying that as far as we can see, where our oceans now extend they
have for an enormous period extended, and where our oscillating
continents now stand they have stood ever since the Silurian epoch;
but that long before that period, the world may have presented a
wholly different aspect; and that the older continents, formed of
formations older than any known to us, may now all be in a
metamorphosed condition, or may lie buried under the ocean.
Passing from these difficulties, all the other great leading facts in
palaeontology seem to me simply to follow on the theory of descent
with modification through natural selection. We can thus understand
how it is that new species come in slowly and successively; how
species of different classes do not necessarily change together, or at
the same rate, or in the same degree; yet in the long run that all
undergo modification to some extent. The extinction of old forms is
the almost inevitable consequence of the production of new forms. We
can understand why when a species has once disappeared it never
reappears. Groups of species increase in numbers slowly, and endure
for unequal periods of time; for the process of modification is
necessarily slow, and depends on many complex contingencies. The
dominant species of the larger dominant groups tend to leave many
modified descendants, and thus new sub-groups and groups are
formed. As these are formed, the species of the less vigorous groups,
from their inferiority inherited from a common progenitor, tend to
become extinct together, and to leave no modified offspring on the
face of the earth. But the utter extinction of a whole group of
species may often be a very slow process, from the survival of a few
descendants, lingering in protected and isolated situations. When a
group has once wholly disappeared, it does not reappear; for the link
of generation has been broken.
We can understand how the spreading of the dominant forms of life,
which are those that oftenest vary, will in the long run tend to
people the world with allied, but modified, descendants; and these
will generally succeed in taking the places of those groups of species
which are their inferiors in the struggle for existence. Hence, after
long intervals of time, the productions of the world will appear to
have changed simultaneously.
We can understand how it is that all the forms of life, ancient and
recent, make together one grand system; for all are connected by
generation. We can understand, from the continued tendency to
divergence of character, why the more ancient a form is, the more it
generally differs from those now living. Why ancient and extinct forms
often tend to fill up gaps between existing forms, sometimes blending
two groups previously classed as distinct into one; but more commonly
only bringing them a little closer together. The more ancient a form
is, the more often, apparently, it displays characters in some degree
intermediate between groups now distinct; for the more ancient a form
is, the more nearly it will be related to, and consequently resemble,
the common progenitor of groups, since become widely
divergent. Extinct forms are seldom directly intermediate between
existing forms; but are intermediate only by a long and circuitous
course through many extinct and very different forms. We can clearly
see why the organic remains of closely consecutive formations are more
closely allied to each other, than are those of remote formations; for
the forms are more closely linked together by generation: we can
clearly see why the remains of an intermediate formation are
intermediate in character.
The inhabitants of each successive period in the world's history have
beaten their predecessors in the race for life, and are, in so far,
higher in the scale of nature; and this may account for that vague yet
ill-defined sentiment, felt by many palaeontologists, that
organisation on the whole has progressed. If it should hereafter be
proved that ancient animals resemble to a certain extent the embryos
of more recent animals of the same class, the fact will be
intelligible. The succession of the same types of structure within the
same areas during the later geological periods ceases to be
mysterious, and is simply explained by inheritance.
If then the geological record be as imperfect as I believe it to be,
and it may at least be asserted that the record cannot be proved to be
much more perfect, the main objections to the theory of natural
selection are greatly diminished or disappear. On the other hand, all
the chief laws of palaeontology plainly proclaim, as it seems to me,
that species have been produced by ordinary generation: old forms
having been supplanted by new and improved forms of life, produced by
the laws of variation still acting round us, and preserved by Natural
Selection.
[ Charles Darwin,
On
the Origin Of Species: A Facsimile of the First Edition,
Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1964, pp. 312-345. ]
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