luke warm, on Jun 13 2008, 01:18 PM, said:
Winstonm, on Jun 12 2008, 06:54 PM, said:
Quote
My understanding is that a mutation occured in the 10,000 generation but the citrate+ ability was not expressed until the 31,500 generation - showing that total ramdoness led to the evolution of a sophisticated apparatus.
In other words, WTF trumped ID
you don't find it peculiar, even a little, that such a change in e coli hasn't occurred in the billions of years leading up to now, resulting in a quite different specimen in the lab?
Nope
Simplicity is a virtue...
Superfulous organs, pathways, and the like are often evolutionary liabilities and get removed from the system.
Consider cave fish / salamanders as a simple example:
It takes a lot of energy to build / operate an eyeball. This organs is completely useless in a pitch black cave. Guess what happens when a colony of fish spends enough time living in a cave? No more eyeballs.
In a similar vein, its very unclear whether an ability to prcess citrate would provide sufficient advantage in the wild to filter on this genotype... Sure, this mutation might occassionally pop up, however, unless its doing some real good it would probably not establish itself. If it did establish itself it might very well disappear again.