Vicar of Bray (scientific hypothesis)

The "Vicar of Bray" hypothesis (or Fisher-Muller Model[1]) attempts to explain why sexual reproduction might have advantages over asexual reproduction - sexual populations having the ability to out-compete asexual populations because they evolve more rapidly in response to environmental changes. The offspring of a population of sexually reproducing individuals will show a more varied selection of phenotypes and they will therefore be more likely to produce a strain that can survive a change in the ecology of the environment in which they live. Under the Vicar of Bray hypothesis, sex benefits a population as a whole, but not individuals within it, making it a case of group selection.[2][3]

The hypothesis originated with August Weismann (1889)[4] and takes its current popular name after the Vicar of Bray, a semi-fictionalised cleric who retained his ecclesiastic office by quickly adapting to the prevailing religious winds in England, switching between various Protestant and Catholic rites as the ruling hierarchy changed.[5] Most biologists accepted a mathematized version of this explanation as providing one of the most important reasons for the prevalence of sexual reproduction in the natural world until the Williams Revolution (George C. Williams's critiques of group selection) re-examined the implicit group-selectionist character of the argument and led to a gene-centered view of evolution in the 1960s. As of 2016 a more popular explanation for the evolutionary origin and maintenance of sex comes in the form of the Red Queen Hypothesis, which instead proposes that sex benefits individual genes directly.[5]

Notes

  1. Martin, Peer (2015). "Reproductive Biology: Parthenogenesis: Mechanisms, Evolution and its Relevance to the Role of Marbled Crayfish as Model Organism and Potential Invader". In Kawai, Tadashi; Faulkes, Zen; Scholtz, Gerhard. Freshwater Crayfish: A Global Overview. Boca Raton: CRC Press. p. 70. ISBN 9781466586406. Retrieved 2016-07-26. The Vicar of Bray Hypothesis, also referred to as Fisher-Muller Model in honour of its developers (Fisher 1930, Muller 1932) [...].
  2. Wilson, David Sloan and Scott K. Gleeson. A Big Book on Sex (1982) Society for the Study of Evolution
  3. Tannenbaum, Emmanuel and José F. Fontanari. "A quasispecies approach to the evolution of sexual replication in unicellular organisms", Theory in Biosciences, Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, ISSN 1431-7613, Issue Volume 127, Number 1, March 2008
  4. Libertini, Giacinto (2011). "WebmedCentral Zoology (2011) 2(3):WMC001787: Concordance of the predictions of a simulation model for the evolutionary advantage of sex with observational evidence". Evolutionary Interpretations of Aging, Disease Phenomenon, and Sex. Naples: Copernican Editions. p. 205. ISBN 9788890648601. Retrieved 2016-07-26. The 'classic' hypothesis (alias Fisher-Muller hypothesis) that sexual reproduction is evolutionarily advantageous because it allows a continuous rearrangement of genes [...], which Bell called 'The Vicar of Bray' [Bell, 1982], was first expressed by Weismann [Weismann, 1889] [...]. Afterwards, it has been formulated in terms of population genetics by Fisher [Fisher, 1930] and Muller [Muller, 1932] [...].
  5. 1 2 Ridley, Matt. The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature (1993), Penguin Books ISBN 0-06-055657-9


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.