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BBC News Science & Environment

1 March 2011 Last updated at 00:43 GMT


Are humans still evolving by Darwin's natural selection?
By Olly Bootle Producer, Horizon
Schematic showing human progress Could technological advances stop the human 
species from evolving?

In 1859, Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species, a book which 
transformed our understanding of how life on Earth developed - but ever since 
then, scientists have wondered whether humans were resourceful enough to remove 
themselves from the grip of natural selection.

There is no question that humans are unique in the animal world. We have 
developed technologies that shelter us from the harshness of the environment in 
a way that no other creatures have managed.

While polar bears evolved thick coats of blubber to insulate them from the 
Arctic cold, humans could skin that polar bear, and use the pelt as clothing to 
keep warm.

Does this mean that, at some point, technological advances have stopped us 
evolving?

Much of the story is in our genes and the sequencing of the human genome has 
helped unlock the answers.

By comparing the genes of people from all around the world, scientists can see 
how different we all are, and therefore how much we have evolved apart from 
each other since our species first appeared.

Skin colour is the most obvious, but there are a number of other examples - our 
metabolism has changed to allow us to digest some things that we could not in 
the past.

The most obvious example of this is lactose, the sugar in milk. Some 10,000 
years ago, before humans started farming, no one could digest this beyond a few 
years of age.

But today, the rate of lactose tolerance in different parts of the world is a 
clue to the different histories of farming across the globe. While 99% of Irish 
people are lactose tolerant, in South East Asia, where there is very little 
tradition of farming, the figure is less than 5%.

"We are living records of our past," says Dr Pardis Sabeti, a geneticist at 
Harvard University. "And so we can look at the DNA of individuals from today 
and get a sense of how they all came to be this way."

So clearly our technology and inventions didn't stop us evolving in the past.

Professor Steve Jones, a geneticist at University College London, said: "In 
Shakespeare's time, only about one English baby in three made it to be 21."

"All those deaths were raw material for natural selection, many of those kids 
died because of the genes they carried. But now, about 99% of all the babies 
born make it to that age."

The bulk of medical and other technological developments which protect us from 
our environment have come in just the past century. So in the developed world 
today, what is there left for natural selection to act on?

"Natural selection, if it hasn't stopped, has at least slowed down," says Jones.

In the developed world today, almost everyone lives long enough to pass on 
their genes, but many of us choose not to.

Some people have three children, and some people have none, so natural 
selection may be working in a different way.
Getting fatter

The realisation that people in the developed world are in effect choosing to 
prevent their genes from surviving beyond them has led evolutionary biologist 
Stephen Stearns to look at evolution in the current generations in a radical 
way.

A long-term medical study of a small town in Massachusetts, called Framingham, 
allowed him to look at the medical history of thousands of women going back to 
the middle of the 20th Century and calculate how the breeding population 
differs from the population as a whole.

It has left him in no doubt that people - at least in Framingham - are still 
evolving and in a surprising direction.

"What we have found with height and weight basically is that natural selection 
appears to be operating to reduce the height and to slightly increase their 
weight."

This was not just a case of people eating more and there was no evidence to 
suggest the trend of people putting on weight and losing height would continue 
indefinitely.

In any case, the changes were very small and very slow, similar to those at 
work in Darwin's evolutionary studies.

"We see rapid evolution when there's rapid environmental change and the biggest 
part of our environment is culture, and culture is exploding," says Prof 
Stearns.

"That's I really think the take-home message of the Framingham study, that we 
are continuing to evolve, that biology is going to change with the culture and 
it's just a matter of not being able to see it because we're stuck right in the 
middle of the process right now."

Technology may have limited the impact of evolutionary forces such as predation 
and disease, but that does not mean humans have stopped evolving.

Far from it, in a world of globalisation, rapidly advancing medical and genetic 
science and the increasing power of individuals to determine their own life 
choices, more powerful forces may come into play.

The direction of our future evolution is likely to be driven as much by us as 
by nature. It may be less dependent on how the world changes us, but ever more 
so on our growing ability to change the world.

Horizon: Are We Still Evolving? will be on BBC Two at 2100 on Tuesday 1 March 
2011 or watch online afterwards via BBC iPlayer




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