Evolution Might be Happening 4 Times Faster Than What Charles Darwin Had Predicted: Study

The findings, according to the researchers, have consequences for predicting species' ability to adapt to environmental change.

Advertisement
By Edited by Gadgets 360 Newsdesk | Updated: 30 May 2022 14:55 IST
Highlights
  • Rate at which evolution occurs depends crucially on genetic differences
  • The team studied data on 19 different wild animal groups around the world
  • Evolution was a much more substantial driver than previously considered

The research showed that evolution cannot be ignored as a process that allows species to persist

Photo Credit: Pixabay / Qimono

Evolution is a continuous process by which species adapt to their changing environment. English naturalist Charles Darwin expanded this simplistic understanding to say that species evolve by way of natural selection, which leads to genetic changes in individuals that favour the survival and reproduction of the same traits. It also meant that various species originated from a single species in a bid to adapt to the changing environment. However, the rate at which evolution occurs depends crucially on genetic differences between individuals. Now, a new research suggests that the Darwinian evolution could be happening up to four times faster than previously thought.

Based on an analysis of genetic variation, the researchers state evolution can happen faster if there are more genetic differences in a species. This is because certain traits die off and stronger ones get established. The researchers wanted to know how much of this “fuel of evolution” exists in wild animal populations.

The study is the first time the speed of evolution has been systematically evaluated on a large scale, rather than on an ad hoc basis. With climate change expected to accelerate in the coming years and bring serious changes to our environment, the researchers hope their study could help predict how quickly animals will be able to adapt. This, in turn, will help researchers understand which species will be able to survive and which won't.

Advertisement

The team, from the Australian National University and the University of Exeter (UK), studied data on 19 different wild animal groups around the world to reach their conclusion, which they published in the journal Science.

Advertisement

The research leader Dr Timothee Bonnet from the Australian National University says the evolution process that Darwin described was incredibly slow. “However, since Darwin, researchers have identified many examples of Darwinian evolution occurring in just a few years,” Dr Bonnet said.

He also cited the example of the peppered moth, which was predominantly white in the UK before the industrial revolution. Dr Bonnet said that with pollution spreading black soot on trees and buildings, black moths had an advantage in terms of survival because birds couldn't see them. Because moth colour impacted survival likelihood and was determined by genetic variations, black moths quickly dominated the populations in England.

Advertisement

The findings, according to the researchers, have consequences for predicting species' ability to adapt to environmental change. Dr Bonnet said that the research showed that evolution cannot be ignored as a process that allows species to persist in the face of environmental change.

With climate change expected to accelerate, there is no certainty that these populations will be able to keep up. However, Dr Bonnet added that evolution was a much more substantial driver than previously considered in populations' resilience to contemporary environmental changes.


Why are they still making more Harry Potter? We discuss this on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

Catch the latest from the Consumer Electronics Show on Gadgets 360, at our CES 2026 hub.

Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Realme 16 Pro Series Roundup: Expected Price in India, Launch Timeline and More
  2. Perplexity CEO Says On-Device AI Can Disrupt the Data Centre Industry
  3. Oppo Will Launch the Reno 15 Series in India on This Date
  4. Redmi Note 15 5G Series India Launch: All You Need to Know
  5. NASA Finds Most Distant Calm Galaxy Cluster Ever Seen in Early Universe
  6. Motorola Signature Spotted With Stylus in Leaked Marketing Image
  7. Poco M8 5G Display, Chipset Details Confirmed Ahead of India Launch
  8. Drive Telugu Thriller Now Streaming on Amazon Prime Video
  9. OnePlus Nord 6 Launch Appears Imminent as Smartphone Visits TDRA Website
  10. Astronomers Look to the Large Magellanic Cloud to Study How Stars Are Born
  1. NASA Finds Most Distant Calm Galaxy Cluster Ever Seen in Early Universe
  2. Wolf Moon Supermoon 2026: Rare January Full Moon Near Perihelion Lights Up the Sky
  3. Astronomers Look to the Large Magellanic Cloud to Study How Stars Are Born
  4. Drive Telugu Thriller Now Streaming on Amazon Prime Video
  5. Naanu Matthu Gunda 2 Now Streaming on ZEE5: A Story of Loyalty, Love, and Reunion
  6. Raj Kundra’s Punjabi Film Mehar Now Streaming Online on KableOne
  7. Honor Power 2 AnTuTu Benchmark Score, Colourways Teased Ahead of January 5 China Launch
  8. Instagram Will Have to Evolve Fast, Warns Adam Mosseri Amid Rise of AI Content
  9. Apple Vision Pro Production, Marketing Said to be Scaled Back Due to Low Sales
  10. Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas Says On-Device AI Can Disrupt the Data Centre Industry
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.