1. Industrial melanism - the phenomenon
2. Historical records
Woodland Melanics Pepper
Urban 27.5 13.0
Rural 6.3 12.5
Woodland Melanics Pepper
Urban 15 43
Rural 164 26
Many moths in Britain come in two different colours, a
lighter "natural" form, and a darker, melanic form.
The
melanic form is in all ways similar to the natural form except that it produces
a much greater amount of melanin, the pigment that gives
its wings their dark colouration.
In Biston
betularia, Kettlewell and his group have performed crosses that have
demonstrated that a single gene controls the difference
between natural and melanic morphs.
2. Historical records
In the last 150 years, the relative preponderance of the
two morphs has changed dramatically.
Old collections from
the early 1800's show that the pepper morph was far and away the most abundant
morph.
Melanic morph was collected only very rarely.
Beginning in the early to mid 1800's, however, melanic
form increased in abundance dramatically, until today, in
some areas virtually all moths are melanic.
There has thus
clearly been a dramatic change in gene frequencies, i.e. evolution has occurred.
3. Observation: the change in morph frequencies corresponded with
the onset of the industrial revolution in Britain.
One
consequence of the industrial revolution was that the smoke and soot put out by
all of the factories that sprung up across Britain caused a
darkening of the tree trunks in many areas, particularly near urban industrial
centers.
Originally, tree trunks had been covered with
light-coloured lichens, but after the industrial revolution, these lichens and the tree trunks they covered became dark in these areas;
many likens were killed.
4. Kettlewell's hypothesis: Because moths spend a great deal of
time during the day resting on tree trunks, Kettlewell reasoned that they are probably exposed to a great deal of predation by birds
and other animals. It would therefore benefit a moth to be
cryptically coloured, so that it will blend in well with the background of the
tree trunk on which it rests.
Individuals that were more cryptically colored would tend
to escape notice by predators to a greater extent, and thus would tend to have a survival advantage over non-cryptically coloured
individuals.
Kettlewell postulated that before the
industrial revolution, the pepper form blended in with the light-colored background of tree trunks, whereas the black morph was
conspicuous, leading to selection against the melanic morphs. This genotype would thus be held at very low frequency.
With the change in tree trunk color associated with
industrialization, however, the melanic forms became cryptically colored and the pepper forms became conspicuous. Under such
situations, the rare melanic mutants would enjoy a
survival advantage and increase in frequency until the pepper forms were
eliminated from the population.
Visual inspection of the degree of crypsis on dark and light tree trunks
supports this hypothesis.
5. Experimental test of the hypothesis.
I. Compare survival of melanic and pepper moths.
I. Compare survival of melanic and pepper moths.
Capture-Mark-Release-Recapture experiment. Released several
hundred marked individuals of both morphs into two types
of woodlands:
-- One woodland near a big city; polluted; trunks darkened with soot.
-- One woodland more rural, relatively unpolluted; tree trunks not darkened.
-- One woodland near a big city; polluted; trunks darkened with soot.
-- One woodland more rural, relatively unpolluted; tree trunks not darkened.
Recaptured using caged females emitting pheromones.
Reasoning: if dark morphs have survival advantage in polluted woods, should
recapture more dark morphs than pepper morphs. By
contrast, if pepper morphs have survival advantage in unpolluted woods, should
recapture more pepper moths there.
Results:
%Recaptured Woodland Melanics Pepper
Urban 27.5 13.0
Rural 6.3 12.5
This experiment showed that the melanic form did indeed
enjoy a survival advantage in polluted woodlands, while the reverse was true in unpolluted areas. However, Kettlewell still had not
shown that this differential survival was caused by
differential susceptibility to predation.
6. Experimental test of the hypothesis.
II. Differential predation
II. Differential predation
Placed recently-killed moths of each morph on tree trunks in
the two types of woodland. Sat in blind and observed what
happened to moths placed out. In particular, counted the number of individuals
of each morph eaten by birds.
Results
No. of moths eaten by birds
Woodland Melanics Pepper
Urban 15 43
Rural 164 26
Interpretation: Kettlewell's hypothesis is confirmed. In
the polluted environment, more pepper morphs are eaten, while in the unpolluted environment, more melanic morphs are eaten.
7. Summary:
Industrial melanism is genetically controlled by a single
locus in B. betularia.
Populations have undergone
evolutionary change in color pattern.
That change is
consistent with the interpretation that it was due to natural selection, in that
there is differential survival of the genotypes caused by
differential predation on a particular background.
Results
confirm qualitative prediction of equation for gene frequency change.
8. Additional point
Industrial melanism is seen in more than 70 species of
British moths, and all show patterns similar to that seen in B. betularia.
At least one prediction based on
Kettlewell's work has come true: since the imposition of pollution control devices on many of Britain's factories in the 1950's,
pollution has decreased markedly in many areas. As a result, many of the formerly polluted woodlands have returned to their original
condition, in which the colour of the tree trunks is light
and mottled. As would be expected from Kettlewell's work, the melanic forms
that were once so prevalent in these areas have almost
disappeared.
(see H.B.D. Kettelwell. 1973. Industrial Melanism. Oxford Univ.
Press, Oxford, U.K.)
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