classical_hero said:
Is this what Evolution is about? Natural selction seems to be a losing of genetic material rather than gaing of infomation.
Actually, the term "evolution" has a meaning which is misleading to most folk. A better naming, IMHO, would be "theory of adaptation".
This, because the name evolution evokes a notion of "development" which can happen, but is incidental, to the manner species relates to their environment.
The example of the shrimp here given - which is also a common issue relating to "deep water fishes", also environments without light - demonstrates perfectly well two things - the workings of the evolutionary system and the narrow-mindedness of the ones opposing it.
It's common knowledge between those who accept the evolutionary table that life has begun in the water (as, being a fluid environment, it was a much easier location for substances to flow before the first circulation systems developed), later moving, than, to dry land.
Obviously, this movement had a cost, which increased more and more as animals moved away from water. The hability to survive indefinitely in a water environment was diminishing, until the point where these animals couldn't do it anymore. From a certain point on, many had to live in land, as living in water would be fatal.
But there was also gain tp these creatures, in escaping competition to less crowded terrain, gaining the hability to move where others could not, having new sources of food. Some species learned to live under the earth where they were safe from predators, some learned to fly, there is even one which managed to become intelligent.
So, in total, all modifications meant a loss, as some caractheristic once had gets lost... but the net result is a gain, for the profit, considering the conditions met, is larger (maybe much larger) than such loss.
Eyes are a prime example. They are highly specialized external organs. Their specialization makes them very fragile and susceptible to harm and desease, and difficult to cure when somehow injuried. However the advantage they provide - to see - more than justifies the cost of having them.
If, however, they are rendered useless for the lack of light - a condition
sine qua non for their functionability - than they become a drag; a useless source of pain and harm, where desease enters more easily and where both predators and preys can strike with greater success.
This leads to a diminished survival potential in comparison to other animals of the species that lacks eyes for some genetic malformation. The former disadvantage, due to a specific circunstance of the environment, becomes the new advantage. These animals, than, become more sucessful in the fight for survival, and hence, gets an increased shot at sucessfully reproducing. The rate of *blind* animals in function of the *total* animals increases steadly, until they become the norm, instead of the exception - a factor called "genetic derivation".
Although it's likely that these animals would evolve another kind of sensorial solution (which may even be less efficient *globally* than sight, but that works better in the conditions they face), let's ignore it and say they would merely become blind to handle the common misconception that "evolution means betterment".
Not necessarily; evolution merely means
the sucess of the caractheristics that better fits the environment. Such caractheristic can mean a step back in relation to a more pompous previous trait, but it will be more appropriate to the challenges of the future of that particular animal considering the circunstances it have been facing.
So natural selection is so because, literally, it envolves the
selection of appropriate traits in response of a pressure which comes from
natural conditions (environment). It may mean loss or gain exclusively, or, more likely, both at the same time.
Does this answers the question?
Regards

.