yeah, i know you know.
I just put my thoughts on record. so I can laugh at them in a few years.
I just put my thoughts on record. so I can laugh at them in a few years.
yeah, i know you know.
I just put my thoughts on record. so I can laugh at them in a few years.
lol ok then..
Are you a biologist ? (if that's a word)
sort of.
:scratchin: What then ? An ecologist ? Geneticist ?
Really ? Evolutionary biologist ? Awesome !!![]()
no, it is not. and it is.
at least we got another 3 years of funding.
Warning.evo-devo
Warning.
The above is a misprint.
Spurious monkey is not declaring himself to be evo-devo, but an evil devil.
you have been warned.![]()
I think it has something to do with our genetic structures coupled with our fast abillity to evolve and evaluate our situations. Perhaps the gene is ''excited'' over generations and generations, influenced by small genetic mistakes, characterized by our increasing knowledge and empathy for each other. Otherwise, it would all just be a mistake, and i'm not really sure that would cut it, since chimps are not so far off the evolutionary mark (genetically-wise), and should still exhibit small evolutionary steps just like humans. The gene itself (in this advanced stage) must be intrinsic to the actual system itself... humans in this case - we have simply, very special temples.
Read something interesting in the bus this morning.
The mutation rate (molecular clock) is not dependent on generation time. Hence an elephant would evolve just as fast as a mouse.
Well, were it not for the fact that rodents have very sloppy DNA repair enzymes.
I guess I should have said elephant and a shrew.
Of course the mutation rate of the DNA is similar in all animals. But the potentially beneficial changes can only come to light in the next generation. And if a species is long-lived it will take much more time to evolve a certain trait than it would take a short-lived species.
But now your not even talking about alien lifeforms, so i'll presume its not that. But if your linking this gene to biology, then you misunderstood the rarity of this particular stage of gene. It is a rare gene, and i found out recently not every lifeform has it. And for some reason, it has special effects. There is (i think) only two forms of the superintelligence gene to date. Certain humans lack both type1 and type2 (the advanced gene), and are called Cephiliacs, with expremely small cranial structures.
Reiku
Of course mutation rate is not similar in all animals. As I already mentioned, rodents have really sloppy proofreading. The mutation rate is higher here.
Apparently similar molecular clock rates are not so much the result of similar mutation rates, caused by things such as radiation and other environmental influences.
What apparently really matters is the relationship population size and generation time.
Small animals with short generation times have usually large populations. Mutations get fixed easier in small populations. Large animals have small populations and usually a longer generation time.
Having a mutation is one thing; keeping it is another.
(my underline)Read something interesting in the bus this morning.
The mutation rate (molecular clock) is not dependent on generation time. Hence an elephant would evolve just as fast as a mouse.
Well, were it not for the fact that rodents have very sloppy DNA repair enzymes.
I guess I should have said elephant and a shrew.
Small animals with short generation times have usually large populations. Mutations get fixed easier in small populations. Large animals have small populations and usually a longer generation time.
Having a mutation is one thing; keeping it is another.