ON THE TENDENCY OF VARIETIES TO DEPART INDEFINITELY FROM THE ORIGINAL TYPE
Instability of Varieties supposed
to prove the permanent distinctness of Species.
One of the strongest arguments which
have been adduced to prove the original and permanent
distinctness of species is, that varieties
produced in a state of domesticity are more or less
unstable, and often have a tendency, if left to themselves,
to return to the normal form of the parent species;
and this instability is considered to be a distinctive
peculiarity of all varieties, even of those occurring
among wild animals in a state of nature, and to constitute
a provision for preserving unchanged the originally
created distinct species.
In the absence or scarcity of facts
and observations as to varieties occurring
among wild animals, this argument has had great weight
with naturalists, and has led to a very general and
somewhat prejudiced belief in the stability of species.
Equally general, however, is the belief in what are
called “permanent or true varieties,”-races
of animals which continually propagate their like,
but which differ so slightly (although constantly)
from some other race, that the one is considered to
be a variety of the other. Which is the
variety and which the original species,
there is generally no means of determining, except
in those rare cases in which the one race has been
known to produce an offspring unlike itself and resembling
the other. This, however, would seem quite incompatible
with the “permanent invariability of species,”
but the difficulty is overcome by assuming that such
varieties have strict limits, and can never again vary
further from the original type, although they may
return to it, which, from the analogy of the domesticated
animals, is considered to be highly probable, if not
certainly proved.
It will be observed that this argument
rests entirely on the assumption, that varieties
occurring in a state of nature are in all respects
analogous to or even identical with those of domestic
animals, and are governed by the same laws as regards
their permanence or further variation. But it
is the object of the present paper to show that this
assumption is altogether false, that there is a general
principle in nature which will cause many varieties
to survive the parent species, and to give rise to
successive variations departing further and further
from the original type; and which also produces, in
domesticated animals, the tendency of varieties to
return to the parent form.
The Struggle for Existence.
The life of wild animals is a struggle
for existence. The full exertion of all their
faculties and all their energies is required to preserve
their own existence and provide for that of their infant
offspring. The possibility of procuring food
during the least favourable seasons, and of escaping
the attacks of their most dangerous enemies, are the
primary conditions which determine the existence both
of individuals and of entire species. These conditions
will also determine the population of a species; and
by a careful consideration of all the circumstances
we may be enabled to comprehend, and in some degree
to explain, what at first sight appears so inexplicable-the
excessive abundance of some species, while others
closely allied to them are very rare.
The Law of Population of Species.
The general proportion that must obtain
between certain groups of animals is readily seen.
Large animals cannot be so abundant as small ones;
the carnivora must be less numerous than the herbivora;
eagles and lions can never be so plentiful as pigeons
and antelopes; and the wild asses of the Tartarian
deserts cannot equal in numbers the horses of the
more luxuriant prairies and pampas of America.
The greater or less fecundity of an animal is often
considered to be one of the chief causes of its abundance
or scarcity; but a consideration of the facts will
show us that it really has little or nothing to do
with the matter. Even the least prolific of animals
would increase rapidly if unchecked, whereas it is
evident that the animal population of the globe must
be stationary, or perhaps, through the influence of
man, decreasing. Fluctuations there may be; but
permanent increase, except in restricted localities,
is almost impossible. For example, our own observation
must convince us that birds do not go on increasing
every year in a geometrical ratio, as they would do,
were there not some powerful check to their natural
increase. Very few birds produce less than two
young ones each year, while many have six, eight,
or ten; four will certainly be below the average;
and if we suppose that each pair produce young only
four times in their life, that will also be below the
average, supposing them not to die either by violence
or want of food. Yet at this rate how tremendous
would be the increase in a few years from a single
pair! A simple calculation will show that in fifteen
years each pair of birds would have increased to nearly
ten millions! whereas we have no reason to believe
that the number of the birds of any country increases
at all in fifteen or in one hundred and fifty years.
With such powers of increase the population must have
reached its limits, and have become stationary, in
a very few years after the origin of each species.
It is evident, therefore, that each year an immense
number of birds must perish-as many in
fact as are born; and as on the lowest calculation
the progeny are each year twice as numerous as their
parents, it follows that, whatever be the average number
of individuals existing in any given country, twice
that number must perish annually,-a
striking result, but one which seems at least highly
probable, and is perhaps under rather than over the
truth. It would therefore appear that, as far
as the continuance of the species and the keeping
up the average number of individuals are concerned,
large broods are superfluous. On the average
all above one become food for hawks and kites,
wild cats or weasels, or perish of cold and hunger
as winter comes on. This is strikingly proved
by the case of particular species; for we find that
their abundance in individuals bears no relation whatever
to their fertility in producing offspring.
Perhaps the most remarkable instance
of an immense bird population is that of the passenger
pigeon of the United States, which lays only one,
or at most two eggs, and is said to rear generally
but one young one. Why is this bird so extraordinarily
abundant, while others producing two or three times
as many young are much less plentiful? The explanation
is not difficult. The food most congenial to
this species, and on which it thrives best, is abundantly
distributed over a very extensive region, offering
such differences of soil and climate, that in one part
or another of the area the supply never fails.
The bird is capable of a very rapid and long-continued
flight, so that it can pass without fatigue over the
whole of the district it inhabits, and as soon as the
supply of food begins to fail in one place is able
to discover a fresh feeding-ground. This example
strikingly shows us that the procuring a constant
supply of wholesome food is almost the sole condition
requisite for ensuring the rapid increase of a given
species, since neither the limited fecundity, nor
the unrestrained attacks of birds of prey and of man
are here sufficient to check it. In no other birds
are these peculiar circumstances so strikingly combined.
Either their food is more liable to failure, or they
have not sufficient power of wing to search for it
over an extensive area, or during some season of the
year it becomes very scarce, and less wholesome substitutes
have to be found; and thus, though more fertile in
offspring, they can never increase beyond the supply
of food in the least favourable seasons.
Many birds can only exist by migrating,
when their food becomes scarce, to regions possessing
a milder, or at least a different climate, though,
as these migrating birds are seldom excessively abundant,
it is evident that the countries they visit are still
deficient in a constant and abundant supply of wholesome
food. Those whose organization does not permit
them to migrate when their food becomes periodically
scarce, can never attain a large population.
This is probably the reasons why woodpeckers are scarce
with us, while in the tropics they are among the most
abundant of solitary birds. Thus the house sparrow
is more abundant than the redbreast, because its food
is more constant and plentiful,-seeds of
grasses being preserved during the winter, and our
farm-yards and stubble-fields furnishing an almost
inexhaustible supply. Why, as a general rule,
are aquatic, and especially sea birds, very numerous
in individuals? Not because they are more prolific
than others, generally the contrary; but because their
food never fails, the sea-shores and river-banks daily
swarming with a fresh supply of small mollusca and
crustacea. Exactly the same laws will apply to
mammals. Wild cats are prolific and have few
enemies; why then are they never as abundant as rabbits?
The only intelligible answer is, that their supply
of food is more precarious. It appears evident,
therefore, that so long as a country remains physically
unchanged, the numbers of its animal population cannot
materially increase. If one species does so, some
others requiring the same kind of food must diminish
in proportion. The numbers that die annually
must be immense; and as the individual existence of
each animal depends upon itself, those that die must
be the weakest-the very young, the aged,
and the diseased-while those that prolong
their existence can only be the most perfect in health
and vigour-those who are best able to obtain
food regularly, and avoid their numerous enemies.
It is, as we commenced by remarking, “a struggle
for existence,” in which the weakest and least
perfectly organized must always succumb.
The Abundance or Rarity of a Species
dependent upon its more or less perfect Adaptation
to the Conditions of Existence.
It seems evident that what takes place
among the individuals of a species must also occur
among the several allied species of a group,-viz.,
that those which are best adapted to obtain a regular
supply of food, and to defend themselves against the
attacks of their enemies and the vicissitudes of the
seasons, must necessarily obtain and preserve a superiority
in population; while those species which from some
defect of power or organization are the least capable
of counteracting the vicissitudes of food-supply,
&c., must diminish in numbers, and, in extreme cases,
become altogether extinct. Between these extremes
the species will present various degrees of capacity
for ensuring the means of preserving life; and it
is thus we account for the abundance or rarity of
species. Our ignorance will generally prevent
us from accurately tracing the effects to their causes;
but could we become perfectly acquainted with the
organization and habits of the various species of
animals, and could we measure the capacity of each
for performing the different acts necessary to its
safety and existence under all the varying circumstances
by which it is surrounded, we might be able even to
calculate the proportionate abundance of individuals
which is the necessary result.
If now we have succeeded in establishing
these two points-1st, that the animal
population of a country is generally stationary, being
kept down by a periodical deficiency of food, and
other checks; and, 2nd, that the comparative
abundance or scarcity of the individuals of the several
species is entirely due to their organization and resulting
habits, which, rendering it more difficult to procure
a regular supply of food and to provide for their
personal safety in some cases than in others, can
only be balanced by a difference in the population
which have to exist in a given area-we
shall be in a condition to proceed to the consideration
of varieties, to which the preceding remarks
have a direct and very important application.
Useful Variations will tend to
Increase; useless or hurtful Variations to Diminish.
Most or perhaps all the variations
from the typical form of a species must have some
definite effect, however slight, on the habits or
capacities of the individuals. Even a change of
colour might, by rendering them more or less distinguishable,
affect their safety; a greater or less development
of hair might modify their habits. More important
changes, such as an increase in the power or dimensions
of the limbs or any of the external organs, would
more or less affect their mode of procuring food or
the range of country which they could inhabit.
It is also evident that most changes would affect,
either favourably or adversely, the powers of prolonging
existence. An antelope with shorter or weaker
legs must necessarily suffer more from the attacks
of the feline carnivora; the passenger pigeon
with less powerful wings would sooner or later be
affected in its powers of procuring a regular supply
of food; and in both cases the result must necessarily
be a diminution of the population of the modified
species. If, on the other hand, any species should
produce a variety having slightly increased powers
of preserving existence, that variety must inevitably
in time acquire a superiority in numbers. These
results must follow as surely as old age, intemperance,
or scarcity of food produce an increased mortality.
In both cases there may be many individual exceptions;
but on the average the rule will invariably be found
to hold good. All varieties will therefore fall
into two classes-those which under the same
conditions would never reach the population of the
parent species, and those which would in time obtain
and keep a numerical superiority. Now, let some
alteration of physical conditions occur in the district-a
long period of drought, a destruction of vegetation
by locusts, the irruption of some new carnivorous
animal seeking “pastures new”-any
change in fact tending to render existence more difficult
to the species in question, and tasking its utmost
powers to avoid complete extermination; it is evident
that, of all the individuals composing the species,
those forming the least numerous and most feebly organized
variety would suffer first, and, were the pressure
severe, must soon become extinct. The same causes
continuing in action, the parent species would next
suffer, would gradually diminish in numbers, and with
a recurrence of similar unfavourable conditions might
also become extinct. Tho superior variety would
then alone remain, and on a return to favourable circumstances
would rapidly increase in numbers and occupy the place
of the extinct species and variety.
Superior Varieties will ultimately
Extirpate the original Species.
The variety would now have
replaced the species, of which it would be
a more perfectly developed and more highly organized
form. It would be in all respects better adapted
to secure its safety, and to prolong its individual
existence and that of the race. Such a variety
could not return to the original form; for
that form is an inferior one, and could never compete
with it for existence. Granted, therefore, a
“tendency” to reproduce the original type
of the species, still the variety must ever remain
preponderant in numbers, and under adverse physical
conditions again alone survive. But this
new, improved, and populous race might itself, in
course of time, give rise to new varieties, exhibiting
several diverging modifications of form, any of which,
tending to increase the facilities for preserving existence,
must, by the same general law, in their turn become
predominant. Here, then, we have progression
and continued divergence deduced from the general
laws which regulate the existence of animals in a state
of nature, and from the undisputed fact that varieties
do frequently occur. It is not, however, contended
that this result would be invariable; a change of
physical conditions in the district might at times
materially modify it, rendering the race which had
been the most capable of supporting existence under
the former conditions now the least so, and even causing
the extinction of the newer and, for a time, superior
race, while the old or parent species and its first
inferior varieties continued to flourish. Variations
in unimportant parts might also occur, having no perceptible
effect on the life-preserving powers; and the varieties
so furnished might run a course parallel with the parent
species, either giving rise to further variations or
returning to the former type. All we argue for
is, that certain varieties have a tendency to maintain
their existence longer than the original species, and
this tendency must make itself felt; for though the
doctrine of chances or averages can never be trusted
to on a limited scale, yet, if applied to high numbers,
the results come nearer to what theory demands, and,
as we approach to an infinity of examples, become
strictly accurate. Now the scale on which nature
works is so vast-the numbers of individuals
and the periods of time with which she deals approach
so near to infinity, than any cause, however slight,
and however liable to be veiled and counteracted by
accidental circumstances, must in the end produce its
full legitimate results.
The Partial Reversion of Domesticated
Varieties explained.
Let us now turn to domesticated animals,
and inquire how varieties produced among them are
affected by the principles here enunciated. The
essential difference in the condition of wild and domestic
animals is this,-that among the former,
their well-being and very existence depend upon the
full exercise and healthy condition of all their senses
and physical powers, whereas, among the latter, these
are only partially exercised, and in some cases are
absolutely unused. A wild animal has to search,
and often to labour, for every mouthful of food-to
exercise sight, hearing, and smell in seeking it,
and in avoiding dangers, in procuring shelter from
the inclemency of the seasons, and in providing for
the subsistence and safety of its offspring. There
is no muscle of its body that is not called into daily
and hourly activity; there is no sense or faculty
that is not strengthened by continual exercise.
The domestic animal, on the other hand, has food provided
for it, is sheltered, and often confined, to guard
it against the vicissitudes of the seasons, is carefully
secured from the attacks of its natural enemies, and
seldom even rears its young without human assistance.
Half of its senses and faculties become quite useless,
and the other half are but occasionally called into
feeble exercise, while even its muscular system is
only irregularly brought into action.
Now when a variety of such an animal
occurs, having increased power or capacity in any
organ or sense, such increase is totally useless, is
never called into action, and may even exist without
the animal ever becoming aware of it. In the
wild animal, on the contrary, all its faculties and
powers being brought into full action for the necessities
of existence, any increase becomes immediately available,
is strengthened by exercise, and must even slightly
modify the food, the habits, and the whole economy
of the race. It creates as it were a new animal,
one of superior powers, and which will necessarily
increase in numbers and outlive those which are inferior
to it.
Again, in the domesticated animal
all variations have an equal chance of continuance;
and those which would decidedly render a wild animal
unable to compete with its fellows and continue its
existence are no disadvantage whatever in a state
of domesticity. Our quickly fattening pigs, short-legged
sheep pouter pigeons, and poodle dogs could never
have come into existence in a state of nature, because
the very first step towards such inferior forms would
have led to the rapid extinction of the race; still
less could they now exist in competition with their
wild allies. The great speed but slight endurance
of the race horse, the unwieldy strength of the ploughman’s
team, would both be useless in a state of nature.
If turned wild on the pampas, such animals would probably
soon become extinct, or under favourable circumstances
might each gradually lose those extreme qualities
which would never be called into action, and in a
few generations revert to a common type, which must
be that in which the various powers and faculties are
so proportioned to each other as to be best adapted
to procure food and secure safety,-that
in which by the full exercise of every part of its
organisation the animal can alone continue to live.
Domestic varieties, when turned wild, must
return to something near the type of the original
wild stock, or become altogether extinct.
We see, then, that no inferences as
to the permanence of varieties in a state of nature
can be deduced from the observations of those occurring
among domestic animals. The two are so much opposed
to each other in every circumstance of their existence,
that what applies to the one is almost sure not to
apply to the other. Domestic animals are abnormal,
irregular, artificial; they are subject to variations
which never occur and never can occur in a state of
nature: their very existence depends altogether
on human care; so far are many of them removed from
that just proportion of faculties, that true balance
of organisation, by means of which alone an animal
left to its own resources can preserve its existence
and continue its race.
Lamarck’s Hypothesis very
different from that now advanced.
The hypothesis of Lamarck-that
progressive changes in species have been produced
by the attempts of animals to increase the development
of their own organs, and thus modify their structure
and habits-has been repeatedly and easily
refuted by all writers on the subject of varieties
and species, and it seems to have been considered that
when this was done the whole question has been finally
settled; but the view here developed renders such
hypothesis quite unnecessary, by showing that similar
results must be produced by the action of principles
constantly at work in nature. The powerful retractile
talons of the falcon-and the cat-tribes have not been
produced or increased by the volition of those animals;
but among the different varieties which occurred in
the earlier and less highly organized forms of these
groups, those always survived longest which had
the greatest facilities for seizing their prey.
Neither did the giraffe acquire its long neck by desiring
to reach the foliage of the more lofty shrubs, and
constantly stretching its neck for the purpose, but
because any varieties which occurred among its antitypes
with a longer neck than usual at once secured a
fresh range of pasture over the same ground as their
shorter-necked companions, and on the first scarcity
of food were thereby enabled to outlive them.
Even the peculiar colours of many animals, more especially
of insects, so closely resembling the soil or leaves
or bark on which they habitually reside, are explained
on the same principle; for though in the course of
ages varieties of many tints may have occurred, yet
those races having colours best adapted to concealment
from their enemies would inevitably survive the longest.
We have also here an acting cause to account for that
balance so often observed in nature,-a deficiency
in one set of organs always being compensated by an
increased development of some others-powerful
wings accompanying weak feet, or great velocity making
up for the absence of defensive weapons; for it has
been shown that all varieties in which an unbalanced
deficiency occurred could not long continue their
existence. The action of this principle is exactly
like that of the centrifugal governor of the steam
engine, which checks and corrects any irregularities
almost before they become evident; and in like manner
no unbalanced deficiency in the animal kingdom can
ever reach any conspicuous magnitude, because it would
make itself felt at the very first step, by rendering
existence difficult and extinction almost sure soon
to follow. An origin such as is here advocated
will also agree with the peculiar character of the
modifications of form and structure which obtain in
organized beings-the many lines of divergence
from a central type, the increasing efficiency and
power of a particular organ through a succession of
allied species, and the remarkable persistence of unimportant
parts, such as colour, texture of plumage and hair,
form of horns or crests, through a series of species
differing considerably in more essential characters.
It also furnishes us with a reason for that “more
specialized structure” which Professor Owen states
to be a characteristic of recent compared with extinct
forms, and which would evidently be the result of
the progressive modification of any organ applied
to a special purpose in the animal economy.
Conclusion.
We believe we have now shown that
there is a tendency in nature to the continued progression
of certain classes of varieties further and
further from the original type-a progression
to which there appears no reason to assign any definite
limits-and that the same principle which
produces this result in a state of nature will also
explain why domestic varieties have a tendency, when
they become wild, to revert to the original type.
This progression, by minute steps, in various directions,
but always checked and balanced by the necessary conditions,
subject to which alone existence can be preserved,
may, it is believed, be followed out so as to agree
with all the phaenomena presented by organized beings,
their extinction and succession in past ages, and all
the extraordinary modifications of form, instinct and
habits which they exhibit.