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Old 06-10-2008, 07:41 PM
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New Evolutionary Trait Observed

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A major evolutionary innovation has unfurled right in front of researchers' eyes. It's the first time evolution has been caught in the act of making such a rare and complex new trait.

And because the species in question is a bacterium, scientists have been able to replay history to show how this evolutionary novelty grew from the accumulation of unpredictable, chance events.

Twenty years ago, evolutionary biologist Richard Lenski of Michigan State University in East Lansing, US, took a single Escherichia coli bacterium and used its descendants to found 12 laboratory populations.

The 12 have been growing ever since, gradually accumulating mutations and evolving for more than 44,000 generations, while Lenski watches what happens.
Profound change

Mostly, the patterns Lenski saw were similar in each separate population. All 12 evolved larger cells, for example, as well as faster growth rates on the glucose they were fed, and lower peak population densities.

But sometime around the 31,500th generation, something dramatic happened in just one of the populations – the bacteria suddenly acquired the ability to metabolise citrate, a second nutrient in their culture medium that E. coli normally cannot use.

Indeed, the inability to use citrate is one of the traits by which bacteriologists distinguish E. coli from other species. The citrate-using mutants increased in population size and diversity.

"It's the most profound change we have seen during the experiment. This was clearly something quite different for them, and it's outside what was normally considered the bounds of E. coli as a species, which makes it especially interesting," says Lenski.
Bacteria make major evolutionary shift in the lab - life - 09 June 2008 - New Scientist
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Old 06-10-2008, 09:10 PM
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While watching evolution in progress may be a good thing. How is this new bacterium a good thing? If it can absorb citrate does that make it more resilient than e. coli?
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Old 06-10-2008, 10:45 PM
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What is so amazing about mutation that increases food supply leading to an increase in population? Why do you think we can eat things that kill dogs?
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Old 06-11-2008, 02:56 AM
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Obviously God wanted the bacteria to be able to use the citrate so he designed them differently.
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