News: What is the latest AAAS news?
Sean Carroll: Evolution's Explorers Entering a New Golden Age of Discovery
CHICAGO--Accompanied by the last bars of U2's "Beautiful Day," as the slides of
dancing lemurs, glowing butterflies and stark volcanic craters faded
from the stage, the crowd at
Sean Carroll's AAAS plenary talk stood for
a spontaneous ovation. The molecular biologist had just finished his hour-long
adventure tale with a resounding last chapter.
Together, the three men forever erased the
idea that each species is a "special creation," and instead showed how
the astonishing variety of life on Earth could lead to the evolution of
new species, said Carroll.
Carroll is a professor of molecular
biology and genetics at the University of Wisconsin and the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute. His research centers on the genes that
control body patterns and play major roles in the evolution of animal
diversity. His latest popular book, Remarkable Creatures, follows the intersecting lives of Darwin, Wallace, and Bates.
The
three explorers had "obsessive collecting disorder," joked Carroll,
which led them to South America and the Malay Peninsula to satisfy
their yen for new and different specimens. Their travels turned them
from collectors to scientists, as they began to ask "not just what
creatures existed in a place, but how those creatures came to be," said
Carroll.
With the help of original letters and research notes,
Carroll compared Darwin's glacially slow caution in divulging his new
view of the origin of species with Wallace's quick publication of the
insights that led him independently to the theory of natural selection.
The pieces of the theory fell into place for Wallace in 1858, and he
promptly wrote to Darwin about his revelation, not knowing that
Darwin's eureka moment had come 20 years before.
Henry Walter
Bates, who explored the Amazon basin with Wallace, lent support to the
new theory with his studies of butterflies that mimic their more
poisonous cousins. Despite the potential for professional competition,
the three men had "great mutual admiration" throughout their lives,
said Carroll.
At the end of his explorers' tale, Carroll said
genetic science is bringing about a second golden age in evolutionary
science, where modern-day collectors capture their exquisite finds from
the natural world in electronic databases.
The genomes of more
than 2000 species--from the platypus to the fruit fly--have been
sequenced, "and now we're seeing glimpses from the laboratory of
exactly how species are made," he said. "As we mine this massive
record...we share the same sense of wonder and surprise and discovery
as these pioneers."
Times may even be better, Carroll concluded,
since most scientists don't have to "cope with malaria or
headhunters--just peer review."

