‘Evolutionary change takes A million years’

Although it’s a constant and sometimes rapid process, evolutionary changes takes one million years, say scientists.
A new study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal, combined for the first time data from short periods such as 10 to 100 years with much longer evidence found in fossil record over millions of years. It determined that rapid changes in local populations often don’t continue, stand the test of time or spread through a species.
In other words, just because humans are two or three inches taller now than they were 200 years ago, it doesn’t mean that process will continue and people be two or three feet taller in 2,000 years.
Or even as tall in one million years as we are now, say the scientists.
“Rapid evolution is clearly a reality over fairly short time periods, sometimes just a few generations,” said lead author Josef Uyeda of Oregon State University.
“But those rapid changes do not always persist and may be confined to small populations. For reasons that are not completely clear, the data show the long-term dynamics of evolution to be quite slow,” he added. “What’s interesting is not that we have so much biological diversity and evolutionary change, but that we have so little. It’s a paradox as to why evolution should be so slow,” Uyeda said.
Long periods of little change, Uyeda said, are called “stasis”, a pattern that originally led to the concept of “punctuated equilibrium”, controversial when it was first proposed in the early 1970s.
This study supports the overall pattern of stasis and punctuational change.

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