Plate X.—Illustrating the fertilization of an orchis by an insect. A, represents a section of the flower and shows a bee standing on the flower’s lip with its head touching the sticky portion of the pollen masses; C, shows the pollen masses stuck to the bee’s head and erect; B, shows the pollen masses horizontal, the proper position to leave them detached from the bee by the sticky stigma.
Natural Selection is the great agency that accounts not only for the color patterns and forms of living creatures, but also for the great majority, if not all, of the useful characteristics of organic creatures, including their internal organization.
One more illustration of the power of Natural Selection may be given, outside of the subject of color patterns. It may be interesting to readers who are not familiar with the elements of zoölogy to know that whales are not fishes but mammals. They belong to the same class that man does. The embryology of a whale reveals that it is descended from ancestors that were land mammals, and that these mammals had a scanty covering of hair, teeth of different shape, broad tails like beavers, short fore and hind legs, and well developed sense organs. The olfactory organ was especially well developed. It is probable that these ancestors of the whale lived in marshy districts and were omnivorous, eating both plant and animal food. They sought their food in both shallow water and in swamps. As the conditions of life became more and more unpropitious on land, they were slowly modified through the ages under the action of Natural Selection into creatures somewhat like dolphins. At first they lived in fresh water, but finally they found their way into the sea and became the rulers of the ocean, from which the giant sea reptiles of earlier epochs had vanished. Hence are explained the adaptive changes of structure: the fore-limbs were modified into flippers enclosed in a fin-like sac, but retaining the bones corresponding to like structures in other mammals, as in the arm of man, the wing of the bat, and the fore-leg of the horse. Traces of the hind legs may be detected in a few species; the tail, which acted as a powerful swimming organ, became divided into two lobes; the head became fish-like in shape; the seven bones of the neck, common to most mammals, grew together; the skin became hairless; and the teeth, which appear in the young of the true whale, but are never cut, gave place to hanging fringes of whalebone, in the meshes of which the animal entangles the minute organisms it feeds upon.[16]
ISOLATION OF VARIETIES IN NATURE.
The following analysis of Isolation will be useful:
| Isolation | { | Sexual. | { | Preferential Mating. |
| { | Cross-Sterility. | |||
| { | Geographical. | |||
It has been stated on an earlier page that the commingling of diverse hereditary units accomplished through the fertilization of an ovum by a spermatozooid is the source of many variations in the offspring. In this fertilized ovum the complexity of chemical substance, and, therefore, the complexity of inheritance, gives instability to the embryo, and thus produces variations in the offspring. In this embryo there is a struggle among the hereditary units,—a struggle among the various qualities inherited from both sides,—and a survival of the fittest, a veritable intra-cellular Natural Selection. It is a well-established law in biology that the union of germ cells of very closely related individuals, that is, of consanguineous individuals (in and in breeding) leads to less vigorous and variable offspring, and the parents are less prolific; while the commingling of diverse heritages by the union of germ cells from individuals belonging to strong but different varieties leads to vigorous and quite variable offspring. The union of such individuals is also most prolific. On the other hand the union of individuals belonging to very diverse varieties becomes less and less prolific until the cross-sterility of species is reached, although there are many exceptions to this rule of cross-sterility. The individuals of a species living in a state of nature are constantly varying. With every generation trivial variations take place in all directions and of all kinds. But these variations are all funded in the common stock, for the varieties freely mingle among one another and cross-breeding is constant not only between them, but with the parent stock. Of the variations that are constantly taking place some are advantageous to the creatures, some are disadvantageous, while many are neutral, being neither useful nor harmful. Natural Selection is ever alert, selecting the advantageous variations and eliminating the disadvantageous ones. The neutral variations are not touched by Natural Selection; among these intercrossing of varieties probably affords Nature an opportunity to make almost endless combinations, some of which might be useful to the animals, and others harmful, and in either case would come under the influence of Natural Selection. The commingling of diverse heritages due to the union of more or less pronounced varieties of the species in nature not only leads to a funding of varietal characteristics, but also increases the instability of the offspring, augmenting their plasticity, so that more numerous and diverse variations take place. According to Romanes the reproductive organs are among the most variable in the body. Of the numerous variations taking place in the individuals of a species under nature, some, therefore, affect the reproductive organs in such a way that certain of these individuals are cross-fertile with one another, but cross-sterile with other varieties and with the parent stock. This interesting and very important kind of variation is known to occur in some individuals of the human species. It is well known that a man and woman have been cross-sterile with one another, being unable to have children; yet when separating and mating with others they have both been cross-fertile, families being reared by both of them.
Variations are commencing species; isolated variations diverge more and more into distinct species. This fact, then, of the occurrence in nature of variations in some of the individuals of a species by which they are cross-fertile with one another, but cross-sterile with other varieties and with the parental stock, shows that Nature has a most effectual means by which varieties may be isolated from one another,—just as effective means as man, the breeder of varieties of domestic animals, possesses in isolating these domestic varieties by physical barriers, as fences, etc. Cross-sterility, therefore, in nature, is a most effective sexual barrier. The special form of it under consideration is what Romanes has called Physiological Selection. The varieties that are isolated by this sexual barrier have got to run the risks of in and in breeding, which Darwin has shown occur in domesticated animals, but which Wallace thinks are much less in a state of nature.
Another very important mode of Nature for isolating varieties is that which arises out of the instinctive preferences of animals. There is a tendency for like to breed with like where varieties are formed. The pale and dark colored herds of fallow deer in the Forest of Dean have never been known to interbreed. In the Falkland Islands all the cattle are known to have descended from the same stock. Here there are differently colored herds of cattle, and those cattle of the same color will interbreed with each other, but not with individuals outside their own color-caste, as Morgan expresses it. When two flocks of heath sheep and merino sheep are mixed together, they do not interbreed. This isolation of varieties by instinctive preferences for those individuals with like color patterns may be spoken of as preferential mating through recognition marks. A very obvious mode of isolation in nature is by geographical barriers (including migration). In treating of environment we learned that during the geologic ages of the globe, the physical geography and climate have repeatedly changed. A very cold temperature, a mountain chain, a body of water, a stretch of desert land, may completely prevent interbreeding, on either side of the barrier, between the individuals of a species.