Evolution | Castle Clash Wiki | FANDOM powered by Wikia

IGG released a new features in the (Sept/Oct 2015) update, which enables Legendary 10 star Heroes to continue getting tougher and gain a new look.

Currently only Legendary Heroes can be evolved and although evolve, their HP per level does not.

AlsoHarpy Queen is subject to an anomalous drop in her HP base.

A Hero must fulfil all the evolutionary (evo) Hero requirements before a it can be evolved. When a Hero is ready to evolve it will appear in the Heroes Altar with the its Star Level shining and the Hero will have Evolve where you typically see the Upgrade button:

The initialmove speed will drop to the 4 Starspeed for evo1 and 5 Starspeed for evo2.

The returned books must be claimed from your mailbox within 7 days.

The following tables shows the minimum number of books that are returned for each level, what level these books can level a new hero to and for each level where the next 500k break starts on that level (add 500k steps to this number to find where the subsequent breaks start, ie for 183 the first break is 313,501 , so the next break will be at 313,501 + 500,000, the next at 313,501 + 2 x 500,000 etc).

Honor Badges are also used to increase the Star level of a hero, which raises it's maximum level capacity:

Use the "Base Evo Stats (Level Up)" shown in a Hero's "Info Box" (found at the top right of each Hero's page) to calculate a Hero's damage (DMG) and Hit/Health Points (HP) for a given HeroLevel:

Spirit Mage example withDamage: [669+] 378 (+13) andHitpoints:[10230+] 1680 (+90):

Evolved Heroes Star level evolve from level 1 with 3 +evolution generationStars.This means that the Hero's Stars will not increase until the evolved Hero reaches the relevant level to Star level, ie, level 80 to go above 4Stars, level 100 to goabove 5Stars.

EvolvedHeroesstill follow the standard stats formula with these exceptions:

This now means that calculating evolved stats includes theHero'sunique fixedbaseas well as newbase stats(be careful not to confusebasewithbase stats) which is typically shown in [x+] in theHero'sInfo Box" andStarswill not start to increase until theHeroreaches 4 or moreStars.

The evo1 heroes' stats have many advantages over their counterparts including starting out with a massive base making them up to around 3.0x - 1.88x HP and about 1.6x - 1.33x DMG than their counterparts. But this is partially offset byStarlevelingup increases not starting until theHeroreaches 5Stars.

Evo1 HP and Evo1 DMG are larger than its equivalent counterpart but the biggest increase is with HP with DMG being much smaller increase.

For HP, an evo1 hero at level 66e1-68e1 will typically be match the HP of its level 180 counterpart and 132e1-135e1 for DMG. But at 66e1-68e1 an evo1's hero DMG will still be well under will that of the level 180, but rather be close to that of level 104-110. It is not until an evo1 hero gets to level 132e1 that its DMG becomes a close match for its counterpart at level 180.

In battle simulations an evo1 level of between 100e1 and 120e1 typically matchesits level 180 counterpart. But this does vary from hero to hero with some heroes able to match at 100e1 and others only barely at 120e1.

- Hero must reach 10 Stars (at least level 180 )

- 1 Evolution Rune (can be obtained by spending 1000 Fame collected from Lost Battlefield)

- 1,000 Red Crystals

- 1 duplicate of the same Hero, you can provide the duplicate by 3 ways:

All Experience gained by the hero after reaching level 180 (10Stars)will be returned inBless Tome experience books (500,000 exp), typically rounded up to the nearest 500,000 exp.

- Hero must reach 10 Stars of the first Evolution system

- 5 Evolution Runes

- 2,000 Red Crystals

- 3 duplicates of the same Hero

If Hero has a higher level than 185, the Experience gained after reaching 185 will be returned in Bless Tome || experience books (500,000 exp).

Honor Badges aren't used for evolving heroes but they will be used to level them up.

Evolution Compare: Evo2 versus Evo1 @ level 185

Evo2 versus Evo1 at level 185: Comparing Evo2 (all levels) to Evo1 at level 185 to see differences in the evolution from evo1 level 185 to evo2.

Excerpt from:

Evolution | Castle Clash Wiki | FANDOM powered by Wikia

The Evolution of Influencers, From the 1700s to Today (Infographic) – Entrepreneur

Free Webinar | August 16th

Find out how to optimize your website to give your customers experiences that will have the biggest ROI for your business. Register Now

Influencer marketing is a great way for companies to boost their reach and get their name out to the world. Tapping into the social followings of celebrities and social media icons is an effective way to get new fans and customers, and while it may feel like its at its height right now, influencer marketing actually has an old history. In fact, it dates all the way back to the 1700s.

Related:How to Create a SuccessfulInfluencer MarketingCampaign

The famous potter and entrepreneur Josiah Wedgwood tapped into royalty, getting kings, queens and other nobles to endorse his pottery line. Later, in 1905, Fatty Arbuckle, an American silent film actor, comedian, director and screenwriter, became the first recorded celebrity to endorse a product, which was Murad Cigarettes.

But today, when we think of celebrity or influencer, stars such as Selena Gomez, Cristiano Ronaldo and DJ Khaled come to mind. And thats because these celebrities have followings so massive, an endorsement or ad by them is sure to get customers swayed to buy a product or try a service.

Related:Coca-Cola, Dell and PayPal Share TheirInfluencerMarketing Secrets

While influencer marketing may have started long ago, with the help of social media, its reaching new heights today -- and it has created an entirely new genre of celebrity. There are a number of famous individuals today who found their fame only because of social media, such as YouTuber Lilly Singh and Vine star Andrew Bachelor. These influencers may be even more effective than celebrities when it comes to endorsing a product -- 70 percent of teenage YouTube subscribers say that these influencers are more relatable than celebrities.

To learn more about the evolution of influencers, check out NoGRE.coms infographic below.

Rose Leadem is an online editorial assistant at Entrepreneur Media Inc.

Original post:

The Evolution of Influencers, From the 1700s to Today (Infographic) - Entrepreneur

EPL at 25: An evolution to find the winning edge – The Straits Times

It took a quarter of a century. The Premier League had gone from an almost exclusively British affair to a cultural melting pot, a place where players and managers from across the footballing world congregated and combined. But it was not until its 25th year that anyone won the league playing with a back three.

It is an indication of what a revolutionary Antonio Conte has proved. When the season starts on Friday, the Premier League may look like Serie A: not in the pace of the game, but in the formations.

The back three, largely unfashionable apart from a spell in the 1990s when Roy Evans' Liverpool and Brian Little's Aston Villa championed it, was used by 18 clubs last season. Even Arsene Wenger, a devotee of the back four, has become a late convert. Even Jose Mourinho has experimented with it. And they had been more English than the English in their preference for a defensive quartet.

For the first half of its existence, the Premier League's dominant formation was the traditionally British 4-4-2. Arguably the division's greatest side, Manchester United's 1999 Treble winners, just played it better than everyone else, albeit with split strikers.

Wenger brought the first injection of Total Football principles to the system, players such as Thierry Henry, Dennis Bergkamp, Robert Pires and Freddie Ljungberg exchanging positions within the shape. Arsenal had a striker who did not always lead the line, a genuine No. 10 and inverted wide midfielders, rather than wingers.

Mourinho also brought a sea change in thinking when he first arrived in 2004. He removed a striker for an extra midfielder, helped by Frank Lampard's ability to outscore most forwards, prioritising the control a specialist anchorman gave him and preferring 4-3-3.

The cautious, counter-attacking approach he and Rafa Benitez introduced was copied. Alex Ferguson also started to field a third central midfielder, valuing possession, particularly in Europe.

Wenger abandoned 4-4-2 when Patrick Vieira left and Cesc Fabregas emerged. English football became less fast and furious. Its teams acquired more nous, which was reflected in its golden age in the Champions League in the 2000s.

Its lesser lights had a similarly pragmatic blueprint, courtesy of Sam Allardyce. He fielded a solitary striker, concentrated on clean sheets and set-pieces and kept teams up.

Players evolved to suit the new systems. The default ploy became 4-2-3-1. The specialist predator became an endangered species, along with the impotent target man; forwards needed to be a hybrid. Attacking midfielders, inverted wingers and No. 10s began to flourish.

The 2010s brought a drop in standards, an increase in goals and a clash of competing ideas. The emphasis on defence declined. Three teams scored a century of goals; a policy of all-out attack mixed with extreme tactical experimenting almost won Brendan Rodgers' Liverpool the title, even if it was a formula few could copy.

After two throwback champions, Mourinho's Chelsea resembling the side of a decade earlier and Leicester's 4-4-2 addicts caring little for possession and offering reminders of the 1980s, came a new era. Perhaps Conte has won the battle of ideas, but in one respect Mauricio Pochettino and Jurgen Klopp have taken English football back to its roots, with gegenpressing a new term for high-tempo football.

In another, the degree of tactical flexibility is new and perhaps will be more prevalent in the future. Pep Guardiola, always liable to change shape, could be a pioneer while Klopp has something both familiar and alien, using a false nine and little width in attack. But history tends to be written by the winners, so for now, Conte seems the most influential innovative import.

See the original post here:

EPL at 25: An evolution to find the winning edge - The Straits Times

Houston Astros Report: The evolution of the rainbow uniform revealed – House of Houston

SEATTLE, WA - JUNE 24: Starter Lance McCullers Jr.

Houston Texans: Five Reasons why Deshaun Watson could be great or a bust by Kenneth Cline

The rainbow uniform design has continued to be one of my favorite Houston Astros uniform design pieces and its right up there with the Shooting Star design of the 1960s. The design of the uniform that I mention of lasted for 21 years from 1975-86 and it has truly stood the test of time.

Paul Lukas of ESPN.com wrote a spectacular piece in regard to the untold story of the uniforms and how one begotten design firm created something that was revolutionary in its own right. Although I wasnt alive when the unis debuted back in 1975, I do recall seeing them at games in the Astrodome before they were modified after the 1986 season, one of the best in team history.

Seeing greats like Nolan Ryan and guys like Mike Scott, Alan Ashby, Jim Deshaies and Billy Hatcher don those uniforms was nothing short of amazing.

I didnt get to go to many games in my early childhood as my family was growing at the time and all my parents resources were focused on keeping a roof over our head and plenty of food to eat. But there were many occasions where I got to go to games and Id just be in awe of the luminosity of the unis as well as the effervescence of our home field, fresh off multi-million dollar renovation where whole interior appeared to be a giant rainbow.

I want to let you read the piece itself but Gary Rollins, the director of Astros TV and radio network, was more in favor of the traditional design like the Detroit Tigers and Los Angeles Dodgers but was steered more in the direction of something more bold. The network was hemorrhaging money at the time and were on the verge of declaring bankruptcy. But it was the new look that staved off such a notion and were a big hit.

Heres a categorization of the evolution by uni expert Paul Lukas:

I do disagree with Lukas in regard to the notion of the 75 jerseys being the best. Im just not a fan of the number being encapsulated in a circle but Im more in favor of the final rehash that continued from 1977-86. Even former Astros president and general manager Tal Smith lobbied hard to get the circle removed.

There were also sorts of designs proposed from a white star on the front to a unique-looking A on the cap of the uniform as well as orange pants. Take a look of those pics None of those wouldve been a good idea because one needs the audacity of such a new concept but not the point of being too tacky. I think the Houston Astros found a perfect medium with the two, hence the design that many of us still wear to this day as a homage to a notable era in franchise history.

Want your voice heard? Join the House of Houston team!

It wouldve been an injustice had this story had not been told and Im glad that a fellow journalist went out to seek the truth and to report it as fully as possible. That is, of course, one of the guiding principles in this business. Lets hope this design continues to stand the test of time like it already has.

Go Astros.

See original here:

Houston Astros Report: The evolution of the rainbow uniform revealed - House of Houston

School Shootings And Evolution: A Response To Pastor Hines – Patheos (blog)

Today Im going to do something unusual: write a direct and explicit response to a Christian. Instead of doing this to another Patheos blogger I am instead going to write to a Christian pastor who publishes videos on YouTube. The pastorI am responding to is Pastor Hines.I encourage any readers of mine to view the video by Pastor Hines. His channel is named Toward a Biblical and Christian Worldview.

Pastor Hines seems to truly believe that he can reduce gun violence but provides no evidence to support this idea.

He claims teaching evolutionand natural selection to children will cause them to lash out and act like animals. He claims that teaching the extraterrestrial origin of life (which no one teaches in the United States as far as I know, at least not as the definitive origin of life on this planet) is child abuse. Pastor Hines claims that abortion is murder and that we celebrate sexual filth. Pastor Hines claims its abusive to indoctrinate children into lies. He also claims that he and those in his camp can understand the world in a way that we as evolutionists cannot. Pastor Hines also tries to claim in a roundabout way that there are no Christian school shooters. Not true.

There is no connection between belief in evolution and school shootings in or out of the United States. Thats a blunt statement but its one that can easily be shown to be true. In order to examine this thoroughly and actually see why Ive arrived at this conclusion lets look at Ballotpedias map of school shootings from 1990 to the present. If you look at it carefully youll notice the most religious area, the south, has the most school shootings. That alone is enough to rip apart the claim that a belief in evolution inherently leads to a population of students more likely to engage in school shootings. But if thats not enough to convince you think about this: theres an article on Quartz which compares school shootings in the United States with multiple victims to school shootings in 36 other countries with multiple victims, whose combined total population is around 3.8 billion people.

I do not want people to leave here thinking I believe belief in Christianity leads to an increased likelihood of a student shooting up a school. I dont believe that. I believe that there are a multitude of factors which influence the possibility that a student or outsider might shoot up a school. But the idea that belief in evolution somehow positively correlates with an increase risk of school shootings is unsupported by evidence.

Victims of school shootings are not playthings you can use to make nonsensical points about the importance of your religion. These are both living and dead victims of a tragedy and I cannot fathom how vile a human being Pastor Hines must be to think that this is an acceptable thing to do. I cannot imagine how despicable someone must be to consider this an appropriate action.

Christianity alone will not reduce school shootings or other instances of violence in and out of school. It just wont and pretending that your religion is a universal remedy for very real violence and ignorance is dangerous. We need to find a way to reduce gun violence but I dont believe for a second that encouraging people to convert to any single religion will actually cause a detectable dip in violence. This pastor wants to make his listeners believe that violence can be reduced due to his religious beliefs. It hasnt been.

One of the biggest issues with the claims of Pastor Hines is that he provides no evidence for them. He doesnt even try. He just boldly asserts what he believes the world ought to be like but almost religiously refuses to back his claims. He doesnt deserve a venue with which to make these ignorant claims if he cant even be bothered to pretend to research them.

Another response to Pastor Hines has been created by the excellent YouTuber Essence Of Thought:

We need to have conversations about this backed by evidence. Pastor Hines is not interested in having such a conversation and this can be determined by examining his remarkable focus on a single school shooting, even if its one of the most violent in living memory. If we actually want to prevent more school shootings we need to carefully look at and analyze various school shootings to come across commonalities, and not make ignorant assertions about what we believe the causes are of a single shooting. Pastors like Pastor Hines do not help us move closer to a world with less school shootings.

See the original post:

School Shootings And Evolution: A Response To Pastor Hines - Patheos (blog)

Evolution key as Eddie Jones plots England’s path to World Cup glory – ESPN.co.uk

Eddie Jones says England will need to be the "best prepared team in the world" to return from Japan victorious.

TWICKENHAM -- Fail to prepare, prepare to fail. That is the adage driving England on as Eddie Jones attempts to mastermind 2019 Rugby World Cup glory.

The tournament in Japan does not kick off for another 25 months, but with their Pool C opponents confirmed, England have already begun to plan for their assault on the Webb Ellis Cup.

Eddie Jones believes Manu Tuilagi can "demolish" the All Blacks and branded Leicester's wrecking-ball centre worth every ounce of effort poured into rebuilding his injury-hit England career.

Manu Tuilagi has returned to the England squad for their three-day preseason training session this weekend.

1 Related

Jones is constantly looking to improve his side -- both on and off the field -- and with that in mind he and members of his backroom staff have looked to sports as diverse as football, formula one, cycling and bobsleigh for inspiration.

"We need to be the best prepared team in the world because to win the World Cup is going to take an extraordinary performance," Jones told reporters at a media briefing Friday.

"And to have an extraordinary performance, we have to have an extraordinary preparation."

They will also, more than likely, need to beat New Zealand. Jones hinted that he had spotted a weakness in the back-to-back champions over the summer, suggesting the All Blacks are "experiencing problems with their depth" as squad players head to Europe.

England are not scheduled to play the All Blacks prior to the World Cup, but signs from their own June tour were encouraging as a side shorn of 15 British & Irish Lions players sealed a 2-0 series win in Argentina.

Jones is not one to get carried away, though, and he knows there is plenty of work to do if England are to return from Japan victorious. On Friday, he admitted he did not have any players at his disposal who would strike fear in opponents.

"We're developing players who are going to be like that," he said.

Billy Vunipola, back in the training squad announced Thursday as he continues to recover from the shoulder injury that ended his Lions tour before it had begun, is one who Jones predicts has the potential to become world class.

Then there are the nine debutants from Argentina retained for the camp on the outskirts of London, with Tom Curry and Sam Underhill both receiving praise. "They've got a range of skills, a range of toughness to set them up to play Test rugby."

The inclusion of the opensides hints at an evolution in the back row. James Haskell's performances under Jones mean he has credit in the bank but the fight for the No. 7 jersey is on.

And that is, perhaps, the secret to England's success over the last 18 months. Everyone from captain Dylan Hartley to the coaching staff knows that if their level drops then their place in the group is under threat.

"No one's set in stone apart from myself for the next game," Jones said. "Everyone's got to keep improving. That's the challenge ahead."

On the pitch Jones is determined to see an improvement in how well his side uses the ball. He believes pragmatic rugby, building through phases to put the opposition under pressure, is a thing of the past.

"You've got to be able to crack the opposition in the first three phases," he said. "Find the space, use the ball, keep the ball alive, and be accurate in your skill work.

"So, that would be what we'd like to see. But that's not going to happen overnight. It takes time, it takes effort, it takes application."

It is the type of rugby that sets the All Blacks apart from every other rugby playing nation, and Jones' desire to depose New Zealand as the world's No. 1 side is behind his willingness to gamble on the talent of Manu Tuilagi.

The Leicester centre is still some way short of a return to the Test arena, as Jones himself admitted, but he possesses an irresistible ability to break the gain line and put into practice the type of game plan that the England coach craves.

"I know the kid himself is working as hard as he can to get back on the field," Jones said. "At the moment everything looks pretty positive so we've just got to pray that this positivity keeps going and he has a period where he can be injury-free and show what he's capable of."

The memory might be fading but England fans are well aware what Tuilagi is capable of. In 2012 the centre capped a wonderful performance with a try as the All Blacks were beaten 38-21 at Twickenham.

It was a game Jones alluded to Friday as he said: "No one's ripped them [New Zealand] apart, apart from Manu."

Jones added: "He loves rugby and he wants to play for England. He loves playing for England.

"He's doing everything he can to get ready and I'm impressed by his dedication because he's had a tough time. The amount of injuries he's had would be enough to knock people away."

Continue reading here:

Evolution key as Eddie Jones plots England's path to World Cup glory - ESPN.co.uk

Santa Fe Opera thinks different with The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs – Toronto Star

Garrett Sorenson as Steve Wozniak and Edward Parks as Steve Jobs in Santa Fe Opera's The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.( KEN HOWARD FOR SANTA FE OPERA )

SANTA FE, N.M.Many of us want to change the world. Steve Jobs did. Or so, plausibly, claims the brochure for this seasons Santa Fe Opera, which has just premiered a full-length, one-act opera titled The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs.

The creative entrepreneur who gave the world Apple hardware and software, yanking even the most reluctant of us into the computer age, may not seem the likeliest of subjects for tenors and sopranos. But Santa Fe Opera, currently under the direction of Charles MacKay, is no ordinary opera company.

Housed in a strikingly modern, mostly outdoor facility, nestled literally in the desert outside New Mexicos centuries-old capital city, this innovative enterprise has been, for decades, an incubator for emerging as well as established operatic talent.

Read more: Opera in New Mexico desert draws Canadian musicians

Igor Stravinsky turned up for its first season in 1957 to attend a production of his only full-length operatic work, The Rakes Progress. And as recently as two years ago, every seat was sold for its entire run before the curtain went up on the premiere of Jennifer Higdons Cold Mountain.

Even so, The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs represented a particular challenge, a first opera by an American composer who (like Higdon) is known largely for his instrumental music, based on the life of a recently deceased (2011) global superstar.

Although Mason Bates and his librettist Mark Campbell insisted that they were not about to produce a documentary theirs is an interpretation of the life and character of Jobs, without the co-operation of their subjects family or of his company neither can it be called a work of fiction.

The story begins in the garage of the Jobs family home in Los Altos, Calif., when Paul Jobs presents his son with a work bench for his 10th birthday.

Thereafter, the libretto moves forward and back through time, visiting pivotal moments in the grown-up boys career, all within Vita Tzykuns unit set, whose walls expand and contract to provide projection surfaces for changing locales.

The libretto is hardly hagiography. The Steve Jobs we meet appears driven, self-centred and only almost likeable when he finally faces his own mortality. In the title role, baritone Edward Parks may not even sound Jobs-like (the real person apparently spoke in a rather high-pitched tenor), but his characterization, complete with an Issey Miyake black turtleneck and Levis 510 jeans, is certainly credible.

Those who know the actual Jobs story, whether by reading Walter Isaacsons monumental biography or through the various other attempts to pin the butterfly, will recognize the cast of characters, from the girlfriend and child he abandoned to the best friend and partner (Steve Wozniak) he cruelly offended, all of whom are portrayed sympathetically under Kevin Newburys direction.

But of course, what matters most in an opera is its music and the music of Bates has turned out to be a clever amalgam of the live and the electronic (whirring electronica, in the composers own words), with Bates himself sitting at a console in the pit next to conductor Michael Christie.

This takes us back to the days of Haydn and Mozart, when composers routinely participated in performances of their own operas, yet it is no mere nostalgic stunt. Bates has sought to give his characters not identifying leitmotifs, in the Wagnerian manner, but individual sound worlds, using samples of what he calls Mac gear. To characterize Jobs spiritual adviser, a Buddhist monk, he even incorporates Tibetan prayer bowls and Chinese gongs.

The music is accessible and sufficiently transparent in its scoring that the words come through with surprising clarity (something that did not happen in the score for Cold Mountain). A major opera? Perhaps not but surely an effective one, with the power to bring an entire audience to its feet. An extra performance has already been added to its run.

The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs is running this season in repertory with four other, more traditional works: Handels Alcina, Donizettis Lucia di Lammermoor, Rimsky-Korsakovs The Golden Cockerel and Strausss Die Fledermaus. I attended performances of two of them.

Lucia di Lammermoor offered in the American soprano Brenda Rae one of the finest vocal actresses I have yet witnessed in the operas famous mad scene. And The Golden Cockerel sported a set by Gary McCann marvellously evocative of the constructivist designs to come out of post-Revolutionary Russia.

Reasons enough for a trip into the New Mexico desert? You bet.

The Toronto Star and thestar.com, each property of Toronto Star Newspapers Limited, One Yonge Street, 4th Floor, Toronto, ON, M5E1E6. You can unsubscribe at any time. Please contact us or see our privacy policy for more information.

View original post here:

Santa Fe Opera thinks different with The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs - Toronto Star

The polar vortex produced rapid evolution in lizards | Harvard … – Harvard Magazine

The green anole lizard, a spectacularly bright reptile found throughout the American south, has difficulty handling temperatures below around 50 degrees Fahrenheit. This doesnt usually pose a problem in its subtropical habitats along the Gulf Coast and in southeastern states. But during the extreme winter of 2013-2014 (resulting from a southward shift in the polar vortex), the lizard endured temperatures so low that it faced selection pressures and evolved a greater tolerance to cold, according to a study published this week in Science by Shane Campbell-Staton, Ph.D. 15, and coauthors Jonathan Losos, professor of organismic and evolutionary biology, and Scott Edwards, Agassiz professor of organismic and evolutionary biology.

Relatively few studies have looked at the natural-selection effects of individual extreme weather events, Campbell-Staton explains, given the difficulty of anticipating those events. The concept for the just-published study emerged by chance in 2013, when he was doing dissertation research on a related topic: the evolution of cold tolerance in green anoles. Several million years ago, ancestors of that species migrated from present-day Cuba to the United States; today, their descendants live in regions as (relatively) cold as Tennessee and Oklahoma. Campbell-Staton was trying to understand what physiological and genetic processes allowed lizards farther north to survive the harsher winter climates.

Soon after returning from what he thought would be his last collection trip, he came across a photo in the Boston Globeof a green anole in Alabama, lying dead in the snow during the 2014 cold snap. I immediately went back to Scott and Jonathan with the idea of trying to measure natural selection in response to the event, he says. Because he already had data from the previous summer on the anoles, he could compare those findings to a new sample of lizards that had survived the winter.

The study compares data collected, before and after the winter, at four sites in TexasBrownsville, Victoria, Austin, and Arlingtonand a fifth in Hodgen, Oklahoma; taken together, they cover a latitudinal distance of almost 800 miles. Each city experienced substantially lower minimum temperatures that winter than during the previous 15 years. The team (which also included Zachary Cheviron, Nicolas Rochette, and Julian Catchen) focused on these sites, Campbell-Staton explains, because their green anole populations are closely related but also display significant variation in cold tolerancethe farther north their habitat, the more resistant they are to frigid conditions. To measure the lizards cold tolerance, the team put each specimen in a chamber and gradually lowered the temperature by one degree Celsius per minute. The lizards were placed on their backs and prodded with forceps, to encourage them to right themselves. The temperature at which they could no longer do so, or the critical thermal minimum, explains Campbell-Staton, is used as a proxy for the temperature at which an animal would not be able to escape the conditions that would eventually lead to its death. (The animals do recovery fully, Losos notes in an email.)

That winter, lizards from Brownsville, at the southernmost tip of Texas, experienced by far the most days on which the temperature was lower than their critical thermal minimum. When the team returned to collect samples in April and July 2014, those lizards surviving in Brownsville showed the most significant increase in their cold tolerance of anoles in any of the five cities: their critical thermal minimum after the winter was lower by about 1.5 degrees Celsius, or 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit. Green anoles from Victoria, about 260 miles to the north, displayed a cold-tolerance increase of 1 degree Celsius, or 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit. Populations from the remaining cities didnt show such changes, probably because they were already relatively cold-tolerant. The Brownsville and Victoria populations that survived had converged with the other cities anoles in their tolerance for cold.

Changes in the reptiles cold tolerance were supported not only by their phenotypestheir outwardly observable behaviorbut also at the genomic level. The gene-expression and genomic-sequencing profiles of the surviving southern-dwelling lizards diverged after the winter from those of lizards Campbell-Staton had studied during the summer; they more closely resembled those of the northern groups, and showed greater differentiation within their own genomes. The genes that faced selection pressure during the winter, Campbell-Staton says, all seem to play a role in nervous-system function. We found that survivors of the storm had a high degree of genetic differentiation in a part of the genome that contains genes associated with the transport and breakdown of neurotransmitters.

Campbell-Statons advisers were initially hesitant about approving the study, because it was an apparent departure from his dissertation research. As it turned out, his instinct was not only perceptive, but prescient. If the extreme cold has made some green anole populations more resilient in low temperatures, it almost certainly has also come at a cost. Lizards that did not survive this cold event may have had genetic variants that would have made them more resilient to a heat wave or a droughtnow those lineages may be lost, Campbell-Staton says. Extreme weather events are likely to become more frequent and severe, and will threaten the viability of species more fragile than the relatively abundant green anole. We are only beginning to understand how anticipated changes in climate are going to affect biodiversity, he adds; the present study offers one promising way in.

See the original post:

The polar vortex produced rapid evolution in lizards | Harvard ... - Harvard Magazine

Q&A with Stanford’s Marcus Feldman on the extension of biology through culture – Stanford University News

Biology Professor Marcus Feldman, director of the Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies, is a pioneer in the field of cultural evolution. (Image credit: L.A. Cicero)

In 1973, Marcus Feldman, professor of biology, and L.L. Cavalli-Sforza, professor emeritus of genetics, published a paper that went on to inspire an entire subdiscipline of cultural anthropology, which applies models inspired by ideas from population genetics to cultural change. In it, the Stanford professors originated a quantitative theory of cultural evolution that described how cultural traits of parents can get passed on to kids.

We draw analogies with biological evolution where things that happen in one part of the genome can often influence whats happening in another part of the genome, said Feldman. In the same way, things that vary in one part of the culture-ome can influence or determine patterns of variation in other parts of the culture-ome.

Last fall Feldman and colleagues from the University of St. Andrews (Scotland) and the University of California, Irvine, led a colloquium on current research in cultural evolution, how cultural evolution and biological evolution overlap, and why this is an important field. That colloquium resulted in several papers, published in the July 25 issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Feldman discussed these topics with Stanford News Service:

What is cultural evolution?

Its the change over time in characteristics of human behavior that can be learned and transmitted from person to person. They can be behavioral traits such as attitudes or norms or ethics or values or use of implements. As in biological evolution, the prevalence of these characteristics can change over time, but unlike most genetic evolution, the rate of change can be very fast, even within a generation.

For example, following the implementation of the fertility control program in China, there was a rapid decline in the number of children that people had, but in early surveys the desired number of children was still about three. Now, the cultural environment has changed so that, for the majority of people, the desired number of children is two or less. It took maybe one generation for that to happen. At the same time, attitudes toward the desirability of having a son did not change and thats why the sex ratio has been so extreme. There was a deeper cultural proclivity, related to carrying on the family name or who can perform rituals when youre buried, and those norms have been much slower to change.

How is cultural evolution different from biological evolution?

The main places where its different is in the transmission mechanism. When Cavalli-Sforza and I wrote our book on cultural evolution 36 years ago, we distinguished three main modes of transmission. One is learning from your parents, which would be very conservative in terms of rates of change. Examples are religious attitudes and political preferences.

The second mode of transmission is what you might learn from your peers. This might be literature or entertainment preferences, attitudes toward food or clothing preferences.

And then we differentiated a third, which refers to those beliefs or behaviors or attitudes that are transmitted by non-parents who are members of an older generation; teachers, for instance.

Is there a clear distinction between what we would consider cultural versus biological evolution?

There was quite a bit of discussion in the meeting about this question. After centuries of asking questions about what is genetic and what is learned and what is imposed, the question is not fully resolved.

For example, one of the things we know is passed on culturally and does not get transmitted through the genes is language. But, it may be that the rapidity with which we learn it or the fluency which we eventually achieve has to do with some parts of our biological makeup.

I think there is no such thing as determination by nurture or nature. The analogy that I like to use is this: A trait is like the area of a rectangle and only knowing one side only the genetics or only the culture doesnt tell you very much about the area.

What has your research focused on?

Right now, were working on figuring out what kinds of cultural advantage would have been necessary for the modern humans to replace Neanderthals. Oren Kolodny, a postdoctoral research fellow in my group, has been working on whether just the migration alone out of Africa would be enough. We also developed models that frame the competition like you would between two species only instead of the competition being based on some resource, like a food, its based on culture. That kind of mathematical model of the spread of modern humans has a lot of similarities with questions that come up in the physics of spatial diffusion, and William Gilpin, a graduate student in applied physics, is collaborating on this together with some wonderful Japanese colleagues.

Other research with Nicole Creanza, a former postdoctoral research fellow of mine now on the faculty of Vanderbilt University, compared genomic variation around the world with phonemic variation around the world the sounds that people make. We turned each language into a series of 1s and 0s based on whether or not they contained certain sounds; every language was a long string of 0s and 1s, and we looked for the patterns of similarities and differences between them. We came to the conclusion that you cant say one is the cause of the other but you could say the geography is the cause of both.

Ive also worked with anthropologist Melissa Brown to study marriage preferences in Taiwan and how they changed due to the prohibition by the Japanese in 1915 of foot binding. Before the ban, the Han Chinese did not want to marry into the aboriginal community because the aboriginesdidnt bind the feet of their women. We showed that there was a very rapid change in marriage customs following the ban on foot binding. One cultural change had a dramatic effect on another, apparently unrelated, aspect of culture.

Why is understanding cultural evolution important?

Worldwide, one of the important things that we can say is that making a cultural change in one area can have important cultural effects on other attitudes and behaviors. For example, prioritizing education for women in Kerala, India, led to them desiring fewer children and investing more effort in those children. Advertising the dangers of cigarettes led to a cultural shift in how people regard smoking.

I think one of the major reasons why China recently changed the fertility policy in the last couple years was that economic and sociocultural changes had reduced the desired number of children. It was also recognized that a pronounced shortage of women would affect the birth rate and population aging, thereby decreasing the available labor in 20 or 30 years. Those kinds of mathematical and statistical projections, if theyre taken seriously by policymakers, can affect and potentially improve the human condition. I think thats one of the significant things we do.

In PNAS, there are several papers about whether animals have cultural transmission. What are people discussing on this topic?

Naturally, if youre an evolutionist, you would want to know: Is there some kind of continuity between animal culture through to what we think of as human culture?

It appears there is cultural transmission of some animal behaviors. Some traits, such as whale songs and certain feeding styles, are correlated between relatives and over geography. In the chimpanzee, there may be up to about 40 different traits that have been identified as potentially being called cultural, but the thing about them is that they dont appear to accumulate. Doubt also seems to exist as to whether theyre actively being taught, whether young individuals are actually learning from their mothers and are then able to teach others.

The PNAS collection has an excellent review of anatomical and potentially cognitive evolution of cumulative culture from a neuroscience perspective. Another paper in the collection focuses on transmission of foraging techniques in songbirds. Even insects may have cultural transmission: Some bees are apparently able to learn to do totally uncharacteristic tasks by watching other bees that can do these unnatural things.

Overall, there appears to be a marked gap between what the scholars believe is animal culture and what we know about human culture. The papers in this collection discuss this problem of accumulation and how one would recognize it.

Feldman is director of the Morrison Institute for Population and Resource Studies; co-director of the Stanford Center for Computational, Evolutionary and Human Genomics; a member of Stanford Bio-X, the Stanford Cancer Institute and the Stanford Neurosciences Institute; and an affiliate of the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment.

The Arthur M. Sackler Colloquium Extension of Biology Through Culture was held in November 2016. It was funded by the John Templeton Foundation and the Stanford Center for Computational, Evolutionary and Human Genomics.

View original post here:

Q&A with Stanford's Marcus Feldman on the extension of biology through culture - Stanford University News

Usain Bolt is going to be in Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 – FourFourTwo

Pro Evolution Soccer creators Konami aim to incentivise theircustomers who pre-order by allowing them to play as the Jamaican sprinter.

The eight-time Olympic gold medallist Boltcan be used in-game if you buy it ahead of its release in September, Konami have now confirmed.

The keen Manchester United fan, who is due to retire after the World Athletic Championships in London this weekend,hasregularly spoken of his desireto transition to football, with Borussia Dortmund CEOHans-Joachim Watzke confirming last year that the Bundesliga club would allow the 30-year-old to train with them.

But for now, you can play with him virtually when PES 2018 launches next month.

Bolt said: "I love football and have played PES for as long as I can remember;it's the best football game there is,and it's a great honour to be a part of it and its success.

"When the opportunity arose to be a player in PES 2018, it was too good to be true.

"Having my face and movements scanned for use in the game was a fascinating process and I hope those who pre-order the game make full use of my pace and skill."

We're confident his pace stats will more than do the job.

In Other News... on FourFourTwo.com

Read more here:

Usain Bolt is going to be in Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 - FourFourTwo

Evolution takes stake in Riversgold IPO – Creamer Media’s Mining Weekly

PERTH (miningweekly.com) Gold miner Evolution Mining will subscribe for A$2.5-million in the upcoming initial public offering (IPO) of gold explorer Riversgold.

Riversgold, which is led by Doray Minerals founder Allan Kelly and former Sirius Resources executive director Jeff Foster, is looking to build a portfolio of mineral projects through exploration and acquisition.

Initial projects in the portfolio include properties in Western Australia, South Australia and Alaska, as well as mineral licence applications in Cambodia.

Evolution VP for discovery Glen Masterman said on Friday that forming a partnership with exploration companies that had a strong technical team and strategy, aligned with Evolution in an important part of the companys discovery programme.

Evolutions investment in Riversgold is consistent with this objective, he said.

Riversgold is hoping to raise a minimum of A$5-million and up to A$8-million through its IPO, and was expected to list on the ASX in the December quarter.

Depending on the actual amount raised, Evolution will hold between 13.6% and 16.2% of the companys total issued share capital following the IPO.

More:

Evolution takes stake in Riversgold IPO - Creamer Media's Mining Weekly

The evolution of "cuck" shows that different far-right groups are learning the same language – New Statesman

The "where were you when you heard JFK had been shot?"moment in recent Scottish politics came on September 6, 2014. It was then, 12 days before the nation made its decision on independence, that YouGov produced a poll putting the Yes campaign ahead for the first time.

The lead was slender, just 51-49, but its hard to overstate the trauma it caused Unionists. Until then, few of us had taken seriously the idea that the nation might actually vote the UK out of existence. The Yessers had spent months dancing and chanting and painting saltires on their cheeks in Glasgows George Square which they renamed "Freedom Square" and Alex Salmond had belligerently insisted it was going to happen in that dead-eyed Kray Twin way of his, but it all seemed rooted in wishful thinking, a confidence trick they would say that, wouldnt they?

The science and the facts were on our side. We hadnt felt the need to make a psychological accommodation with the possibility.

That poll changed everything. We had, in effect, been given a week and a halfs notice that our country could be taken away from us. Despite the empty platitudes and dodgy statistics that had poured from the mouths of SNP politicians throughout the campaign, the very obvious economic, cultural and diplomatic shocks that would follow, the lack of a credible plan for the aftermath, it might be on. Many English readers will have found the decision to leave the EU and its aftermath tough going - for Scottish Unionists, a Yes vote would have been like a hurricane to Brexits stiff breeze.

By the time September 18 rolled around we had all calmed down a bit. The polls showed the the Union would almost certainly prevail. But that stout certainty had gone, and in truth it has never returned. I suspect it never will. The existence of the UK feels contingent, its ties transactional rather than emotional, our identity an ongoing negotiation. The independence debate refuses to die, while the separatists continue to dominate civic life and gnaw away at the bonds. Who knows how this ends, but many No voters will admit privately that theyve made the necessary psychological accommodation. I know I certainly have: the world wouldnt end, the sun would still come up, wed manage.

As the newly published British Election Study (BES) shows, those two big referendums on the UKs future arrangements, those big calls on who we are and whether we should stay or go, have remade the electoral weather. In Scotland, their outcomes have interacted with one another, as if in some constitutional petri dish, rewiring the electorates thought patterns, rerouting their voting habits and upsetting traditional allegiances.

In an article, BES team members Chris Prosser and Ed Fieldhouse say: "In the space of three general elections [between 2010 and 2017], the Scottish party system has been completely transformed. The SNP moved from third place to first Labour has fallen from first to third, and the Conservatives have risen from fourth to second. The last few years of Scottish politics have a clear tale to tell: referendums that cut across party lines can lead to major disturbances in the party system."

The study finds that among those who voted Yes to independence and to Remain in the EU, nine out of 10 backed the SNP in Junes general election. But among those who voted Yes and then Leave, four in 10 who had voted SNP in the 2015 election switched to another party in 2017.

No/Remain voters had predominantly backed Labour in 2015 but in June around one in five of them switched to the Tories. Ruth Davidsons more liberal Conservatism and her staunch support for the Union also attracted around a third of 2015 Liberal Democrat voters. Among No/Leave voters, Davidsons party scooped up around half of Labours 2015 support, 60% of Liberal Democrats and most Ukip supporters.

As Prosser and Fieldhouse write: It is not hard to see how the referendums on Scottish independence and the UKs membership of the EU have been the catalyst for these changes.

Its also not hard to see the fragility of these new voter coalitions. Davidsons charisma and nous might hold the resurgent Tory vote together for a while, but can she really please Yes and No and Leave and Remain supporters for long? As the prospect of a second indyref seems to recede, will Yes voters who abandoned the Nats in June give up on their dream of a separate Scottish state? If Jeremy Corbyns Labour continues its momentum, why wouldnt Kezia Dugdale benefit from the shift in the public mood?If the consequences of Brexit bite, can the Scottish Tories hope to escape public ire?

In short, nothing has been resolved and those "major disturbances"will play out for a long time to come. The summer break has been a useful pause for the party leaders and their teams, allowing them to gain some perspective, gather their thoughts and plan their tactics for when recess ends in September. But the complexity of the times means they will be playing multi-dimensional chess. It would be nice to think that we will spend the autumn having a serious debate about reforms to Scotlands struggling schools and how to inject greater dynamism into our economy. Sadly, its more likely that, like a migraine, independence and Brexit will continue to dominate.

See more here:

The evolution of "cuck" shows that different far-right groups are learning the same language - New Statesman

The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs – San Diego Reader

To continue the theme of innovation versus truth and beauty, I present to you, The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs. This new opera by Mason Bates had its world premiere at Santa Fe Opera on Saturday, July 22.

With Anne Aikiko Meyers

Yes, an opera about Steve Jobs. However, the title couldnt just be Steve Jobs they had to give us that artistic play on words (R)evolution. I hate it already. How good can it possibly be with a title such as that?

On Night of Too Many Stars, 2012

There are no clips of the music available but having listened to several other pieces by Mason Bates I have an idea of what to expect. If you like sound effects then you will like what Mason Bates does.

"Check out this cool sound. Now check out this cool sound. Here's another one. Have I blown your mind or what?"

I can say that his violin concerto shows promise but is in a constant state of distraction. Can someone please write something that is "on the beat" half the time? It's all monotonously off the beat. After a while one can only scream, "What's the point?"

This constant rhythmic masturbation is my main hang-up with modern music. There is no flow. Perhaps that is an accurate reflection of our current age of distraction which has been brought about primarily by the iPhone.

In one way, Bates is doing what Jobs did. Bates combines an orchestra with electronica and uses this to fuel his invention. Jobs took existing idioms and had them combined in order to create invention.

While were on the topic, lets be clear that Jobs is in the same vein as Thomas Edison not Nikola Tesla. Edison did not invent the lightbulb, the movie projector, or several other technologies such as the battery.

This quote from Inventions Edison did not make sums it up perfectly. Thomas Edison himself did not invent major breakthroughs. He often took credit for the ideas and inventions of others and most of his patents were little more than improvements on already existing products. He was an astute businessman, and as such, had greater impact on innovating existing products than inventing new ones.

The same can be said of Steve Jobs. If we take away his perceived creative genius, is Jobs worthy of an opera? He was incredible at executing ideas or rather keeping an entire company focused on the central idea but his leadership style was less than inspiring.

From what I've read of the reviews from Santa Fe, the story is non-linear and takes place over the course of 18 vignettes in the space of 85 minutes. The show reportedly gives us no further insights into the man or the milieu in which he existed.

The 85 minutes is the perfect length for an iPhone toting audience but feels short given the scope of the narrative which covers the entirety of Jobs' life. If we look to operas which have remained in play over the years, there are no biographies.

An opera completely dedicated to the struggle between the ideologies of Jobs and Wozniak in their early years could have been quite compelling. Woz is the Tesla to Jobs' Edison.

My response here is strangely negative for a show I've never seen. Ive been long-winded about my disappointment in most contemporary musical efforts and it feels as though Im looking for faults. I am looking for something of true stature.

San Francisco Opera will be producing it during their 2019-2020 season. The Santa Fe shows have been sold out and additional performances are being considered. Given the religious stature of Jobs in the Bay Area, tickets to the San Francisco Opera will be hard to come by.

I'm guessing by that point there will be an iPhone-augmented reality app to go with the production.

Read more here:

The (R)evolution of Steve Jobs - San Diego Reader

Hyper Evolution: Rise of the Robots is a timely look at robots that Kubrick could only dream of – review – Telegraph.co.uk

Those pesky robots, eh? This week, Facebook shut down a pair of its artificial intelligence chatbots after they invented their own language and started talking to each other in a way only they understood. Eat your heart out, Stanley Kubrick. This was like a sinister plot twist in a dystopian vision of the future.

If the tinny tykes arent hell-bent on universal domination (see Doctor Whos Cybermen), theyre becoming scarily sentient (witness Humans or Westworld).

Hyper Evolution: Rise of the Robots (BBC Four) was a timely two-part documentary investigating how far robots have come and what it could mean if, like in those sci-fi series, machines developed true consciousness and emotional intelligence.

This concluding episode saw evolutionary biologist Dr Ben Garrod and electronics engineer Professor Danielle George criss-crossing the globe to come face to metal face with a range of futuristic creations.

Read the rest here:

Hyper Evolution: Rise of the Robots is a timely look at robots that Kubrick could only dream of - review - Telegraph.co.uk

How to Slam Dunk Creationists like Mike Pence When It Comes to the Theory of Evolution – Newsweek

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

The 2001 discovery of the seven million-year-old Sahelanthropus, the first known upright ape-like creatures, was yet more proof of humanitys place among the great apes. And yet Mike Pence, then a representative and now U.S. vice president, argues for the opposite conclusion.

For him, our ideas about our ancestors have changed, proving once more that evolution was a theory, and therefore we should be free to teach other theories alongside evolution in our classrooms.

Daily Emails and Alerts - Get the best of Newsweek delivered to your inbox

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence speaks during an event celebrating National Military Appreciation Month and National Military Spouse Appreciation Day at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building in Washington, D.C., May 9. Joshua Roberts/File Photo/Reuters

How to respond? The usual answer is that we should teach students the meaning of the word theory as used in sciencethat is, a hypothesis (or idea) that has stood up to repeated testing. Pences argument will then be exposed to be what philosophers call an equivocation an argument that only seems to make sense because the same word is being used in two different senses.

Evolution, Pence argues, is a theory, theories are uncertain, therefore evolution is uncertain. But evolution is a theory only in the scientific sense of the word. And in the words of the National Academy of Sciences:The formal scientific definition of theory is quite different from the everyday meaning of the word. It refers to a comprehensive explanation of some aspect of nature that is supported by a vast body of evidence. Attaching this label to evolution is an indicator of strength, not weakness.

If you take this approach, you have failed to understand the purpose of Pences rhetoric, or why it is so appealing to creationists. Pence is an accomplished politician, and knows exactly how to appeal to his intended audience. He is also an accomplished trial lawyer, which makes him a conjuror with words, and like any skilful conjuror he has pulled off his trick by distraction. Pence has drawn us into a discussion about words, when our focus should be on the evidence.

I would suggest the opposite approach. The problem is not really with the word theory at all. Students will have learned its meaning in the same way they learn meanings in general: by seeing how the word is used.

Charles Darwin J. Cameron/CC

They will have heard of atomic theory, which no one has seriously doubted for over a century. And what about the theory of gravity? Finally, they may have seen how Darwin himself uses the expression my theory,"although at the time it was neither comprehensive nor well supported (there were huge gaps in the fossil record), to refer in a very general way to his linked ideas about mutability of species, common descent, and the power of natural selection.

So if anyone says, Evolution is a theory," dont give them a lecture on the meaning of the word theory."If you do, youve fallen into the trap of making it seem that how we define words should affect how we see reality. You will be fighting on ground of your opponents choosing, since arguing about how to apply words is the stock in trade of theologians, preachers and lawyers like Mike Pence.

The correct response is to say that evolution is a theorylike gravity is a theoryand then redirect attention to the evidence. And that evidence is overwhelming.

Start with family relationships. Carl Linnaeus showed how living things can be classified into species, genera, families and so on, and Darwin pointed out that this is exactly the structure we would expect from a family tree. All dogs are canines, so dogs share an ancestor with foxes; all canines are carnivora, so dogs share a more remote ancestor with bears; all carnivora are mammals, so dogs and sheep are, albeit more remotely, related, and so on.

Then look at the discovery over the past few decades of family relationships at the molecular level, and the fact that the molecular family tree matches that based on anatomical resemblances.

Observe the fossil record. Once lamentably full of gaps (Darwin was among the lamenters), it is now densely populated. A century ago, it still made sense to point to the missing link between humans and pre-human apes. Now we know of several different hominin species living alongside each other, and the problem becomes one of distinguishing our grandparents from our great uncles. And yes, there are missing links in the chain, but without evolution we would not have a chain at all.

A display of a series of skeltons showing the evolution of humans at the Peabody Museum, New Haven, Connecticut, circa 1935. Hulton Archive/Getty Images

And then theres biogeography: for example, why marsupials are only found in South America and Australasia, and except for a few species that made their way across the Isthmus of Panama, are never found elsewhere.

Plus we can actually observe evolution, and study it in the field or in the lab. The emergence of pesticide resistance is evolution in action, as shown in the justly famous Harvard/Technion demonstration evolution on a plate." So is the delightful Russian experiment of breeding tame foxes. Artificial selection, just as much as natural selection, is evolution in action.

And finally, and most convincingly, we must look at the way that these different lines of evidence mesh together. We can apply biogeography to the fossil record, and link it to what we know about the movements of the continents. Using the methods of molecular biology, we can identify and time the mutations that led different species to diverge from their common ancestor, and match the timing against the fossil record.

Sperm whale. Whales are related to hoofed animals. Hiroya Minakuchi/Minden/National Geographic Creative

Thus the fossil record, deep anatomical resemblances, and DNA evidence agree in showing that whales, for instance, are closely related to hoofed mammals, diverging from them in the Eocene period. There are many other examples of such consistency.

Then, and only then, pause to explain how a scientific theory is an interlocking connection of ideas that explain things about the world, and that evolution is one of the most successful examples. And challenge the Mike Pences of this world to spell out exactly what they would like to see taught alongside the Theory of Evolutionand why.

Paul Bratermanis Hon. Research Fellow; Professor Emeritus atUniversity of Glasgow

The rest is here:

How to Slam Dunk Creationists like Mike Pence When It Comes to the Theory of Evolution - Newsweek

MSU genetics and evolution study receives $1.2 million NSF grant – Mississippi State Newsroom

Contact: Sarah Nicholas

STARKVILLE, Miss.Mississippi State is part of a new research collaboration sponsored by the National Science Foundation in which a colorful tropical butterfly is helping researchers investigate genetics and evolution.

Scientists at the Starkville land-grant university and the University of Puerto RicoRio Piedras will be studying the relationship in organisms between genetic material, or genotype, and physical characteristics due to gene expression and environmental influences, or phenotype.

Brian Counterman, an associate professor of biological sciences, leads the MSU research team. Ryan Range, assistant professor of biological sciences, as well as Jovonn Hill and Federico Hoffman, both assistant professors in the Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology and Plant Pathology, also are part of the study that will examine genotype-phenotype relationships using color patterns of the Heliconius butterfly.

More than $1.2 million is being provided through the NSFs Established Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, known as EPSCoR, for the MSU collaboration over four years.

National Science Foundation leaders have noted how the genotype-to-phenotype relationship has significant societal and economic implications across scientific fields and areas of industry such as medicine, agriculture and biotechnology.

According to EPSCoR Head Denise Barnes, Over the past several decades, scientists and engineers have made massive strides in decoding, amassing and storing genomic data. For that reason, the federal agency is committed to providing the U.S. scientific community, including MSU, with resources for future discoveries that may help improve food-crop yields, better predictions for human disease risk and new drug therapies.

Angus Dawe, head of MSUs Department of Biological Sciences, said that in addition to helping raise our profile nationally, the project will make possible extensive support for training students and extend the impact of work at MSU to other regions.

This award will support foundational work at the cutting edge of genetics and evolution, Dawe said.

As Counterman recounted, groundbreaking 19th century naturalist Charles Darwin (1809-82) considered Heliconius to be the most striking example of natural selection in the wild because it has the ability to work with other butterflies to train predators that they are toxic.

When species work together, more individual butterflies survive and produce offspring, which is the process of natural selection at its best, Counterman observed.

Counterman said the new inquiry actually is an extension of a project we were already working on with Puerto RicoRio Piedras. When we finished in February, we decided to take it a step further and write a proposal for this grant.

Dawe said the MSU department is proud of its facultys continued success in obtaining research support from a variety of agencies, even as federal funding rates have been cut dramatically. To be able to receive awards in this climate is further evidence that biological sciences at Mississippi State competes with the very best programs anywhere, he emphasized.

Counterman said he and fellow team members are excited about opportunities to provide highly specialized genomic training in both Mississippi and Puerto Rico.

An MSU faculty member since 2010, Counterman is a biology doctoral graduate of Duke University who earlier earned a bachelors degree in ecology and evolution at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Dawe said that research proposals for national grants typically involve a tremendous amount of work. He expressed his departments deep appreciation for administrative support and scientific collaborations with campus colleagues in the College of Arts and Sciences, the Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology and Plant Pathology in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, as well as the offices of Sponsored Projects and Research and Economic Development.

We are extremely grateful for their support, without which the submission of grant proposals could not happen, he said.

For details about EPSCoRs ongoing mission, visit http://www.nsf.gov/od/oia/programs/epscor.

MSUs College of Arts and Sciences includes more than 5,000 students, 300 full-time faculty members, nine doctoral programs and 25 academic majors offered in 14 departments. It also is home to the most diverse units for research and scholarly activities, including the Department of Biological Sciences.

Research expenditures in the humanities are also an important part of Mississippi States overall research portfolio. Additionally, the NSF has ranked MSU among the top 25 for research expenditures in the social sciences. For more information on MSUs College of Arts and Sciences, visit http://www.cas.msstate.edu. The Department of Biological Sciences is online at http://www.biology.msstate.edu.

MSU is Mississippis leading university, also available online at http://www.msstate.edu.

Here is the original post:

MSU genetics and evolution study receives $1.2 million NSF grant - Mississippi State Newsroom

A Dam in Brazil Has Altered the Course of Evolution – Atlas Obscura

Part of the reservoir created by the Serra da Mesa Dam. Felipe Venncio/CC BY 2.0Thanks to the Serra da Mesa Dam in central Brazil, close to 300 islands were created in the span of just two years. More than 650 square miles of the Cerrado region were inundated by the reservoir, which finished filling in 1998. The region is considered a biodiversity hotspot. By so altering the landscape, the dam and reservoir threaten that, but by creating new environments and isolating species, theyre showing how life adapts to all the changes we throw at it.

The hilltops that became islands were once home to a variety of lizards that eat termites, and isolation impacted different varieties of lizards in different ways. Larger species died out (though they survive on the mainland) because they couldnt find enough termites on their islands maintain large body size. So Gymnodactylus amarali, a small gecko, inherited a whole termite buffet.

There was just one problem. For most of the G. amarali geckos, the termites were too big to eatbigger than their mouths. But some of the individual lizards were lucky enough to have slightly larger heads. So they gobbled up termites, thrived, and passed the large-head trait on to their offspring. When scientists from Brazil and the United States compared the island-dwelling lizards with their mainland relativesseparated by only 15 years and a short stretch of waterthe researchers found the island lizards had heads that are about four percent larger. The researchers write in their report that the shift is astonishing because it was so rapid and the lizard populations on the five islands they studied evolved the same trait independently of each other.

It is possible, Science reports, that the larger head size isnt a result of evolution, but rather better growth thanks to the new environment and altered diet. However, the researchers believe evolution explains the size difference, and plan to check for genetic changes in the future.

See the original post here:

A Dam in Brazil Has Altered the Course of Evolution - Atlas Obscura

Jump for joy: researchers make huge leap in understanding frog evolution – The Guardian

) at a the laboratory of Santa Fe zoo in Medellin, Colombia. Many species of frogs, including the Golden Frog, the most venomous frog in the world, are in danger of extinction. Photograph: Raul Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images

Although Kermit the Frog has always struggled with body image, in evolutionary terms, the frog body plan is a rather successful one. With a short, stout body, protruding eyes and strong, flexible limbs with webbed feet, the world can be your swamp. The frog body plan has remained rather similar for almost 200m years, and with only limited tweaks in anatomy, frogs (Anura) have managed to occupy a range of different habitats, from muddy pools in Alaska to tree tops in the tropics. Currently, over 6700 species are known from all continents except Antarctica, which makes frogs one of the most diverse and species-rich groups of tetrapods. Never change a good thing. However, this limited variation in the frog body plan over time and space has made it difficult for biologists to reconstruct the evolutionary history of frogs and to sort out who is related to who.

Frogs are amphibians, and the oldest member of the frog lineage the stem-frog Triadobatrachus massinoti which lived during the Early Triassic (~250m years ago) in what is now Madagascar still retained primitive features, such as a tail and the likely inability to jump, that distinguish it from modern frogs. By the Early Cretaceous (131-120m years ago), the first members of the modern frogs have evolved, such as the three-dimensionally preserved Liaobatrachus zhaoi from the Yixian Formation in China (Dong et al., 2013).

The rise of molecular techniques enabled scientists to use DNA instead of morphology to try to unravel the frog family tree. Initial studies focused only on a limited number of genes, and as a result, age estimates for certain groups of frogs varied wildly. Moreover, these studied did little to understand relationships within frog groups, particularly for those groups that contain massive numbers of species, such as the Hyloidea which includes the glass frogs and poison-dart frogs.

A new study by Yan-Lie Feng and colleagues from Sun Yat-Sen University in Guangzhou, China, set out to change this by using an extensive molecular dataset that included 95 different genes from 156 species of frogs. Their dataset represents a major leap compared to previous studies, and has resulted in the best supported timescale of frog evolution thusfar.

By using such a large number of genes and species, this new analysis indicates that the major frog groups are younger than previously thought. The last common ancestor of all living frogs (crown-group Anura) is estimated to have lived during the Upper Triassic at 210m years ago. This is in contrast to previous studies that placed the last common ancestor much further back in time at around 250 million years.

When plotting the diversification of frogs on a geological time scale, it becomes clear that diversification events in frogs coincide with break-ups of major prehistoric landmasses. The first split within Anura is that between the Neobatrachia and other anurans. This split occurs at ~ 180 Mya (Middle Jurassic), at around the same time as the breakup of Pangaea into the two supercontinents Laurasia (northern hemisphere) and Gondwana (southern hemisphere). A second break up occurred at around 135m years ago, when two major lineages of Neobatrachia split into Proceola, containing the superfamily Hyloidea, and Diplasiocoela including the Ranoidea. This split coincides with the separation of South America and Africa and the spreading of the South Atlantic Ocean sea floor in the Early Cretaceous.

Interestingly, three major lineages of frogs, the Hyloidea, Microhylidae and Natatanura, have a near-synchronous origin at around 66m years ago. That estimate overlaps with a major extinction event, the Cretaceous Tertiary (K/T) mass extinction, during which two-thirds of life on earth, including the non-avian dinosaurs, marine reptiles and pterosaurs, went extinct.

Although there is little fossil evidence to show how the K/T mass extinction impacted frogs, it is not unlikely that a number of frog species went the way of the dinosaurs. However, when researchers looked at the rate at which species originated during that time period, the analysis indicated that there was a surge in frog diversification immediately following the K/T boundary. Quite ribbiting, perhaps, is the fact that 88% of current frog species originated in this relatively short time period after the K/T mass extinctions.

Mass extinctions leave behind a wasteland of empty ecological real estate. Species that survive can take advantage of this empty ecological space, and as different organisms invade different niches, they adapt and diversify. This is why mass extinction events are often followed by periods of rapid adaptive radiation and speciation.

The demise of non-avian dinosaurs and many other groups at the end of the Cretaceous triggered explosive radiations of mammals (Alroy, 1999) and birds (Ksepka et al., 2017). This new study on frogs shows that the aftermath of the K/T mass extinction may have provided new ecological opportunities for amphibians as well. Particularly, the increase in forest habitats after the massive loss of vegetation that happened at the K/T boundary is thought to have played a major role in enabling adaptive radiations for arboreal taxa. Truly arboreal species of frogs are limited to groups that originated after the K/T boundary, demonstrating how mass extinctions in the past have shaped the current diversity of frogs. However, as past performance is no guarantee for future success, it remains to be seen how frogs will do in the next round of mass extinction.

References

Alroy, J. 1999. The fossil record of North American mammals: evidence for a Paleocene evolutionary radiation. Systematic Biology 48 (1).

Dong, L., Roek, Z., Wang, Y., and Jones, M.E.H. 2013. Anurans from the Lower Cretaceous Jehol Group of Western Liaoning, China. PLoS ONE 8 (12)

Feng, Y-J., Blackburn; D.C., Liang, D., Hillis, D.M., Wake, D.B., Cannatella, D.C., and Zhang, P. 2017. Phylogenomics reveals rapid, simultaneous diversification of three major clades of Gondwanan frogs at the Cretaceous Paleogene boundary. PNAS 114(29)

Ksepka D.T., Stidham, T.A., and Williamson, T.E. 2017. Early Paleocene landbird supports rapid phylogenetic and morphological diversification of crown birds after the KPg mass extinction. PNAS 114 (30)

Continued here:

Jump for joy: researchers make huge leap in understanding frog evolution - The Guardian

Pregnancy loss and the evolution of sex are linked by cellular line dance – Phys.Org

August 1, 2017 by Eric Hamilton Credit: CC0 Public Domain

After Dan Levitis and his wife lost two pregnancies, before having their three children, he was drawn to investigate why pregnancy loss is so common, and whether other living beings face the same struggle his family did.

Levitis, a scientist in the University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Botany, had one main suspect in mind: meiosis, which organisms use to produce sperm and eggs for sexual reproduction. He describes meiosis as an intricate cellular line dance, one that mixes up chromosomes to reshuffle genes. This rearrangement helps create offspring that are different from their parents, offspring that might be better equipped to survive in a changing world.

But meiosis is also one of the most complex processes that cells undergo, and a lot can go wrong as chromosomes tangle and untangle themselves. Levitis figured that this complexity might lead to problems creating healthy progeny.

In new research published this week (Aug. 1, 2017) in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, Levitis and his collaborators report that meiosis takes a heavy toll on the viability of offspring. And not just for humans. Creatures from geckos to garlic and cactuses to cockroaches pay a price to undergo sexual reproduction.

The work provides deeper context on the fundamental biological causes behind pregnancy loss, and suggests that the advantages of sexual reproduction must overcome the severe constraints imposed by meiosis.

"It's known that for humans, the primary cause of pregnancy loss is chromosomal abnormalities arising from meiosis," says Anne Pringle, a professor of botany at UW-Madison and another author of the research. "But what wasn't at all clear was whether meiosis is a leading cause of inviability not just in humans, but wherever it occurs."

The video will load shortly

To answer this question, Levitis compared the viability of offspring produced by three different kinds of reproduction. Sexual reproduction, where two players make a genetic contribution, always requires meiosis. On the other hand, asexual reproductionwhere the offspring are clones of their parentsusually uses the much simpler mitosis, a comparatively easy cloning of cells, no genetic reshuffling required. When asexual reproduction does use meiosis, it is even more complicated than sex.

In this three-way comparison, Levitis found that more complex reproduction resulted in lower offspring survival. For example, asexual lizards that use meiosis had lower viability than sexual lizards that also use meiosis because asexual meiosis was more complicated. Yet the organisms that used the simpler mitosis, like palm trees and damselflies, produced healthier offspring.

This pattern held true in 42 of 44 species. "When you get a result that consistent across such a wide range of organisms, it's suspicious," says Levitis. But even after a second look, the data checked out. Something about meiosis, seemingly its complexity, kills offspring.

"If you're making your tally sheet, all the pluses and minuses of sex, the fact that sex requires this deadly process is pretty clearly a disadvantage," says Levitis.

Regarding the evolution of sex, Levitis' findings suggest that the advantages of going through meiosis must be significant enough to balance that tally sheet. The reshuffling of genes between two parents during sex might provide even more of an advantage than previously thought.

The other takeaway, says Levitis, is that although it's easy to think that natural selection can solve every problemand that we might wish it had, such as for high rates of pregnancy losssometimes it comes up against fundamental constraints. Meiosis seems to be one of those insurmountable barriers.

Yet the tradeoff, offspring that are truly unique, with novel genetic combinations to face a challenging world, must be worth it.

Explore further: Researchers identify traffic cop mechanism for meiosis

More information: Is meiosis a fundamental cause of inviability among sexual and asexual plants and animals? Proceedings of the Royal Society B, rspb.royalsocietypublishing.or .1098/rspb.2017.0939

Researchers at NYU and the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research have identified the mechanism that plays "traffic cop" in meiosisthe process of cell division required in reproduction. Their findings, which appear ...

Researchers at New York University and the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research have identified the mechanism that plays "traffic cop" in meiosisthe process of cell division required in reproduction. Their findings, ...

Alternative splicing significantly expands the form and function of the genome of organisms with limited gene numbers and is especially important for several stages of mouse spermatogenesis.

Why is sex so popular among plants and animals, and why isn't asexual reproduction, or cloning, a more common reproductive strategy?

Where would we be without meiosis and recombination? For a start, none of us sexually reproducing organisms would be here, because that's how sperm and eggs are made. And when meiosis doesn't work properly, it can lead to ...

Geneticists have identified an enzyme which regulates the production of sperm and egg cells in human reproduction.

All animals use a combination of senses to survive. But where the majority typically rely on one or two especially sensitive sensory systems, the oilbird excels by apparently having keen senses all-around.

An unspoken frustration for evolutionary biologists over the past 100 years, says Craig Albertson at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, is that genetics can only account for a small percentage of variation in the physical ...

Interpreting relationships between species and their environments is crucial to inform ecosystem-based management (EBM), a priority for NOAA Fisheries. EBM recognizes the diverse interactions within an ecosystemincluding ...

After Dan Levitis and his wife lost two pregnancies, before having their three children, he was drawn to investigate why pregnancy loss is so common, and whether other living beings face the same struggle his family did.

The first flower to appear along the path of plant evolution, during the time of the dinosaurs, was a hermaphrodite with petal-like organs arranged in concentric circles, researchers said Monday.

Dietary restriction - the reduction of a specific nutrient or total dietary intake without triggering malnutritionincreases longevity and improves learning, but are these processes regulated separately? A new study publishing ...

Please sign in to add a comment. Registration is free, and takes less than a minute. Read more

More:

Pregnancy loss and the evolution of sex are linked by cellular line dance - Phys.Org

Wednesday’s best TV: Hyper Evolution Rise of the Robots; Fargo – The Guardian

Hyper Evolution: Rise of the Robots, BBC4. Photograph: BBC/Windfall Films/Ed cave

No royal goes unmocked as the family plan a gathering at Balmoral. Camilla (Haydn Gwynne) wants revenge on Theresa May, and Charles (Harry Enfield, giving it the bumbling brilliance) makes waves in Scotland when its revealed hes wearing nae skiddies beneath his kilt. Prince Harrys relationship with Meghan Markle reaches new heights when the actor gets a part in Hollyoaks, but Pippa plans to scupper their love. Gloriously silly stuff. Hannah Verdier

Davina McCall and Nicky Campbell help two more families pulled apart by the cruellest of circumstances. Andy McNicol from Walsall, along with wife Hazel, has devoted years of his life to fostering children. But the McNicol family album is lacking any pictures of one person: Andys biological son from a previous relationship. We also meet Mary Davies from Hounslow, as she tries to find the mother forced to offer her up for adoption at six weeks old. Mark Gibbings-Jones

If humanity is doomed to be crushed by Skynet or similar, boffins Danielle George and Ben Garrod are determined to look our future metal overlords right in the eye-sensor. In the concluding part of their lively R2-detour, the pair criss-cross the globe to fistbump with state-of-the-art robotic AI, from Nasas bipedal would-be Mars rambler Valkyrie to darling little Kirobo, a Japanese chatterbox designed to cheer up lonely astronauts. Graeme Virtue

The season finale of what has been a superb series, of which you trust the Coens themselves would have been proud. Theres a warehouse shootout involving the formidable Kikki and Wrench, Ruby Goldfarb reveals her true colours, and Emmit teeters ever nearer to the brink to which he has been nudged throughout the series. Meanwhile, Gloria and the almost engagingly villainous Varga push towards their final confrontation. Immensely satisfying TV. David Stubbs

Because hip millennials need reality TV, too, you know. This new show follows comedians and real-life couple Bobby Mair and Harriet Kemsley as they plan their wedding. The theme this week is money the pair dont have much, and everything involved with weddings is expensive. Some amusing moments for sure, but the fact is, when youre dealing with a life event like this, its impossible to see the funny side all of the time. John Robinson

In which modern confectioners undertake a time-travelling busmans holiday, recreating the sweets of ye olden days using the ingredients and equipment of the time. Tonight, in the final episode of the series, its the turn of the Victorian era. Historians Emma Dabiri and Annie Gray provide deft social and economic context as the confectioners stock their shop with items up to and including an immense Easter egg. Andrew Mueller

The host of BBC2s The Mash Report takes his turn in the standup showcase. Confidence and likability power him through a series of anecdotes that expend a lot of energy setting up often gentle punchlines. Among the best stories are Kumars trip to see Shame at the cinema accompanied by his father, his response to a racist press question, and his attempt to rebrand as a cooler version of himself at uni. Jack Seale

Arbitrage (Nicholas Jarecki, 2012) 1.30am Thursday, Channel 4

Robert Miller is a crooked, silver-haired hedge fund manager suddenly on the verge of ruin when he and his art dealer mistress (Laetitia Casta) are involved in a fatal car crash. Its a role tailor-made for Richard Gere and the Armani suits fit immaculately. Theres nothing too original, but its a sleek and lustrous affair, with fine support from Susan Sarandon as the wronged wife and Tim Roth as the LA detective investigating Miller. Paul Howlett

Horse Racing: Goodwood Festival 1.30pm, ITV. The second day including the Qatar Sussex Stakes.

Cycling: Tour of Poland 2.30pm, Eurosport 2. Coverage of stage five featuring a 130km route from Olimp to Nagawczyn.

T20 Blast Cricket: Leicestershire Foxes v Nottinghamshire Outlaws 6pm, Sky Sports Cricket. A North Division match which takes place at Grace Road.

Visit link:

Wednesday's best TV: Hyper Evolution Rise of the Robots; Fargo - The Guardian