The future of human evolution
23 Apr 2014 by Evoluted New Media
It is a continuous and lengthy process happening right under our noses; but what does the future hold for human evolution?
As a species, we are still evolving; we look different to humans 200,000 years ago, and our appearance will probably have changed in another 200,000 years.
However, our evolution is no longer shaped by natural selection alone; medical advances are sculpting the future of human evolution with modern medicine having had a profound effect. Compared to the 19th century, more children now reach their adult years, and thanks to our use of vaccines, antibiotics and pharmaceuticals, we have an increasingly ageing population.
“Modern medicine, extending the major contributions of clean water with vaccines and antibiotics, has significantly changed the selection pressures operating on humans, primarily through a dramatic reduction in mortality rates and cultural management of reproduction with contraceptives,” says Professor Stephen Stearns, an evolutionary biologist from Yale University.
We are becoming increasingly reliant on medicines to survive – and the very adversaries we hope to destroy with medication are increasingly becoming resistant to their effects. Selective pressure through disease has lessened: the weak survive to pass on their genes and survival of the fittest has a much lesser impact.
“The fact that everybody stays alive, at least until they’re sexually mature, means ‘survival of the fittest’ has got nothing to work with,” says Steve Jones, genetics professor at University College London. “That part of the Darwinian fuel has gone.”
But medical advances can offer much more than prolonging life. It already has a helping hand in creating it, and could go further by opening up the possibility of parents being able to choose the traits of their offspring before they are even conceived.
“Parents could basically choose which sperm and egg get to meet up to produce a baby based on genetic information about which genes contribute to which physical and mental traits,” says Geoffrey Miller, an evolutionary psychologist from the University of New Mexico.
“I see no major moral issues with genetic engineering to avoid birth defects and genetic diseases expressed later in life, but then I am not influenced in that judgement by religion, and many are. I respect their opinions,” Professor Stearns says. “As for genetic engineering for intelligence, beauty, athletic performance ... that will be difficult and very expensive, therefore accessible only to the rich. In all these cases the technical problems are immense and the fundamental science is not yet well understood, so you don't have to hold your breath.”
While it is possible to eliminate undesirable mutations, parents might also unwittingly eliminate those which are the strongest, or most beneficial to the species as a whole. We could be inadvertently selecting weak traits, or traits that would have died out naturally.
Attempts to predict are useless, for culture is changing much faster than biology can respondThis isn’t evolution in the traditional sense, but it could change the future of our species. Medical advances mean that we are creating a false evolution. Designer babies and disease treatment and prevention mean that we are artificially selecting the genes to pass on to future generations, whether through a conscious choice or simply allowing them to survive. Through this engineering we could be stunting our own evolution; by artificially selecting genes in this way, we could be preventing the emergence of significant mutations required for evolution to occur. Combine this with our tendency to travel all over the globe – opening up the possibility of inter-population breeding – evolution could be weakened. “Everything we know about evolutionary change suggests that genetic innovations are only likely to become fixed in small isolated populations,” says Ian Tattersall, an anthropologist from the American Museum of Natural History. “If populations aren’t isolated, crossbreeding makes it much less likely for potentially significant mutations to become established in the gene pool – and that’s exactly where we are now.” It is likely that humans will converge genetically as populations mix and we will probably all begin to look the same – it could even mean natural blondes and red-heads become an endangered phenotype. “I kind of view us all as eventually having chocolate-coloured hair and medium stature, getting rid of all extremes,” says Peter Ward, a palaeontologist from the University of Washington at Seattle. “I want us to have big heads and be smarter. I suspect we will all be tan, shorter, and unhappy for much of the future.” Professor Stearns worries about the accuracy of such long-term predictions: “We are able to predict some changes in the very short term. In the 20th century there was selection for shorter, chubbier women in Massachusetts and taller, thinner women after 1975 in The Gambia, but those are both short-term trends, and they probably will not amount to much,” he says.
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