Pete Zicato • Oct 13, 2011 4:14 pm
This arrangement is called mutualism. Both plant and wasp depend on the arrangement to survive, and without one, you wouldn't have the other.
DanaC;763514 wrote:How the hell did the story of the wasp and the fig restore your belief in God?
It's one of the key examples used by evolutionary biologists to demonstrate the evolutionary process.
The story of figs and wasps is very interesting and one that is explained and illuminated quite well in Climbing Mount Improbable. One of the things he draws attention to is that all nine hundred species of fig have their own unique species of wasp. Each fig species have evolved through time in conjunction with a particular wasp. (You could say it the other way round. Each species of wasp has evolved with a particular fig as its counterpart.) This evolutionary partnership has had tremendous benefits for both the wasp and the fig.
The wasp needs a source of food and a place to lay her eggs. In the distant past when there was only one fig and one wasp species, competition was fierce. Over time new fig and wasp species appeared and as the wasp population became divided between those that used one kind of fig and those that used another, competition for food and space lessened.
As yet more species of each evolved, the competition decreased even more, until the wasp and the fig arrived at their present situation where each species of wasp feeds and lays her eggs in just one species of fig tree that is unique to that wasp species. Competition is still there but it is much less than it was all those aeons ago. Natural selection has done its bit. By pairing wasps and figs together it has helped the wasps fill niches that are particular to its species. The figs have also benefited from this arrangement, as they no longer have to compete with other fig species, or indeed other flowering plants for pollinators. This has meant that they no longer have to waste huge amounts of energy in producing garish advertisements; they have a captive market.
Brianna;763880 wrote:/threaddrift/ i remember sitting in a class to become a certified hearing conservationist (it's true and I did) and thinking that the ear was the most amazing thing and that it proved the Goddess exsists and loves us.
footfootfoot;763965 wrote:I remember the first time I smoked pot too.
ZenGum;763944 wrote:see how the fig is a flower sealed in on itself, with fat pulpy stamens, and the orange is a fig with thicker skin and fatter, juicier stamens.
If you chose a good flower you could eat all three.
Why would God bother with the details when he could just get the ball rolling and sit back with a blunt, watching it evolve?Gravdigr;763787 wrote:Without getting into an Evolution vs. Hand of God thing, there's just too much interdependence happening there.
:blunt: