Although no new animal species has yet been man-made there seems no overwhelming reason why this should not happen with some of the new chromosome-doubling drugs. However, a new kind of man is not likely. Among higher animals the mechanism of heredity is very complex indeed. It isn’t likely to happen in nature, in the face of atomic radiation. It has been calculated that normally there is one human mutation per generation for each 50,000 individuals. The high probability is that this mutation involves a recessive, or hidden, gene. Its effects do not appear in the population until two persons carrying the same recessive are mated. About 999 out of 1,000 recessive genes are “bad” and in due course will cause the extinction of the line in which they appear. In the long history of the race it is likely that everybody has fallen heir to one lethal gene, but it may be a long time making its appearance in family lines.

Most of the genes in any given population, good or bad, are so hidden that it is practically impossible to predict what the offspring of any particular couple will be.

The recessive genes have vastly increased through the operation of human “melting pots” all over the world in the last few generations. One result is that minority races tend to become absorbed in majorities. Thus the relatively small American Negro population, without any further inter-marriage but purely through the cropping out of recessives already received from the white majority, will be entirely amalgamated in the more numerous race in approximately 2,000 years.

Genetics is getting into the hands of scientists tools which can speed up the natural process of change about 1,000-fold and this may result in either good or evil. The good side is well illustrated by hybrid corn—a plant which cannot be considered a new species. This lately has been carried to the point where corn with much more sugar in its stalks and only six instead of twelve feet high can be produced.

The Great Seal Migration

The great annual northward migration of the seals is one of the most remarkable phenomena of animal life. It seems to be without organization and without leadership. Yet toward the end of March each year the hundreds of thousands of cow seals and pups scattered over thousands of square miles of water start at about the same time in three great groups bound for three specific places. It has been the same for centuries, perhaps milleniums. Each animal moves at about the same rate so that all arrive within a few days of each other. Unlike birds, they do not move in compact masses. Three great herds exist.

The American herd of about 1,500,000 is by far the largest of the three. It goes straight to the Pribiloffs, where it goes ashore on two almost barren islands—St Paul and St George. The Japanese herd, numbering about 40,000, makes for Robben Island, off northern Japan. The Russian herd, now estimated at about 200,000, goes to a few rocky islands of the Commander archipelago off Kamchatka.

The moving herds consist almost entirely of females and young. The bulls winter further north, tend to be solitary during the winter, and precede the cows to the summer homes. The breeding season lasts for about two months. During this time the bull never eats or touches a drop of water. He never leaves the land. He arrives sleek and fat from the ocean pasture and is able to survive entirely on stored energy. This keeps him alive, even when he fights scores of terrible battles with younger rivals. Towards the end of summer he naturally is a sorry looking creature.

One day, actuated by some common impulse, cows and calves depart. Then the bulls, their arduous labors of race propagation over for ten months, draw back among the rocks for a long rest.

The Magic Bark of the Cinchona Tree