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When Moths become... Moths
The story of the Peppered
Moth has been set forth for decades as the prime
example of evolution in action. It is a fascinating
story about how, due to a combination of environmental
changes and selective predation, a moth turned into,
well, a moth.
The peppered moth,
scientifically known as Biston betularia, exists
in two primary forms, one light colored with spots and
one almost black. As the tale goes, in the mid 1800s,
the lighter variety of the moth (typica)
predominated. During the Industrial Revolution, the
lichen on tree trunks died, soot got deposited on trees,
and as a result trees got darker. As this change
occurred, the population of darker moths (carbonaria)
increased, presumably due to the camouflage offered by
the darker trees. Bird predators could not see the dark
moths against the dark bark, and as the darker moth
population increased, the lighter moth population
decreased.
This story has been
touted for years as a great example of Darwinian
evolution in action. Countless
textbooks are lavishly illustrated with photographs of
light and dark moths resting on light and dark tree
trunks to teach the wonders of evolution. In 2002, in
her publication, Of Moths and Men, Judith Hooper
wrote,
“It is the slam dunk of natural selection, the
paradigmatic story that converts high school and college
students to Darwin, the thundering left hook to the jaw
of creationism.” But wait,
there’s more.
Much of the “proof” for
this evolutionary change came from the work of a man
named Dr. Bernard Kettlewell, a medical
doctor-turned-entomologist, at Oxford University. Dr.
Kettlewell had been intrigued by changes in the relative
populations of the moths. In his experiments he set out
to show that the changes were a result of natural
selection in response to environmental change and
selective predation.
Kettlewell went to a
polluted woodland area near Birmingham, England. There
the trees had become darkened due to pollution. In the
woods, Kettlewell undertook the first of his
release-recapture experiments. He released moths, 447
of the carbonaria variety and 137 of the
typica variety. Traps were set to recapture the
moths that night, and the numbers of each variety were
assessed the next morning. A much higher percentage of
darker moths than lighter moths were recovered. Kettlewell
recaptured 27.5% of the carbonaria, but only
13.0% of the typica. From this data, Kettlewell
concluded that “birds act as selective agents” and
subsequently felt that this represented evolution by
natural selection.
To further examine this,
Kettlewell then undertook another release-recapture
experiment. This was done in a wooded area near Dorset,
England. Here the trees
had not been darkened by pollution. As
before, both light and dark moths were released and then
recaptured and counted. Here
12.5% of the typica were recaptured but only 6.3%
of the carbonaria. Kettlewell
anticipated this result because he hypothesized that
birds would more easily prey upon the darker moths than
the lighter moths due to the lighter color of the trees.
Adding credence to
Kettlewell’s theory, others noted that, as pollution
decreased, the population of lighter moths increased in
some areas. In the late 1950s, pollution control laws
were enacted and air quality improved. In some places,
as the lichen returned to the trees, the expected
increase in the population of the typica variety
of moth occurred.
Scientists believed this increase further
confirmed this living example of evolution.
From this point on, there
was no stopping the peppered moth bandwagon. High
school and college biology textbooks heralded the
peppered moth as the classic example of evolution in
action. The peppered moth story has been presented to
students for years as a classic case of evolution, the
process by which molecules eventually turned into man.
But then, trouble poked
its ugly head onto
the horizon of evolution. Scientific claims must be
confirmed through repetition, but over the years many
attempts to repeat Kettlewell’s studies have failed to
confirm his results. These contradictory reports showed
high populations of typica in polluted areas or
inordinately high numbers of carbonaria in
lightly polluted areas. Some studies failed to confirm
the observation that the lighter moths increased as the
lichen cover of the trees recovered. Even so, the
challenges failed to remove the vaunted moth from its
lofty perch.
The major challenge to
Kettlewell’s work came in 1998 when Michael Majerus, a
geneticist from Cambridge published a book entitled,
Melanism: Evolution in Action. Although many of the
criticisms of Kettlewell’s work had been around for
years, Majerus’s critique of Kettlewell’s methods caused
quite a stir in evolutionary circles. In a review of
this book in the journal Nature, Dr. Jerry Coyne
said this; “My own reaction resembles the dismay
attending my discovery, at the age of six, that it was
my father and not Santa who brought the presents on
Christmas Eve.” He further commented; “It is also worth
pondering why there has been general and unquestioned
acceptance of Kettlewell’s work.” Things were starting
to look bad for our friend, Biston betularia.
Then things got worse.
In 2002, a journalist
named Judith Hooper published the book Of Moths and
Men: An Evolutionary Tale. This
book detailed the story of the research involving the
peppered moth, including an exploration of the lives of
the principal people involved. She described the lives
and backgrounds of not only Kettlewell but also of E.B.
Ford, Kettlewell’s mentor at Oxford. The
somewhat unflattering portraits of these men were
disturbing and, in one sense, made for good reading…
that is if by good reading one likes reveling in the
shortcomings of other human beings.
However, it was Hooper’s
detailed examination of Kettlewell’s experimental
techniques, which fueled the most controversy. She
thoroughly described the method used by Kettlewell in
each of his field studies, along with an analysis of the
data he collected. Her conclusions were shocking in
that she suggests that Kettlewell, after obtaining
disappointing data in the early phase of his study,
manipulated his collection of data later in the study in
order to obtain the desired result. The
possibility of outright fraud was even mentioned. The
scientific community was aghast.
The first and foremost evidence for
evolution in action, “the prize horse in our stable,”
was apparently in jeopardy.
Although there have been
many concerns raised about Kettlewell’s experimental
techniques, the biggest issue seems to revolve around
where moths rest during the day.
In his study, Kettlewell released moths
during the daytime and watched them take resting places
on the trunks of trees. He
then observed birds preying on the moths. During the
night, he collected and counted the moths. He concluded
that birds preyed more readily on the more visible moths
than on the ones better hidden by their surroundings.
The problem with this conclusion is that, over many
years of study, it had been determined that these
moths do not rest on tree
trunks during the day! They fly only at night,
and they take resting places high in the trees on the
underside of branches. In
these places they are much better concealed from birds
than were the moths in Kettlewell’s experiments.
According to Howlett and Majerus; “exposed areas of
tree trunks are not an important resting site for any
form of B. betularia.”
This is more than an
insignificant criticism. Abnormal
placement of the moths into a location rendering them
much more visible would bring into question the validity
of Kettlewell’s results. First
of all, the distinction between light and dark moths
would be much less on the shadowy underside of a branch.
Secondly, the unnaturally high concentration of moths
in an unusual area might have changed the normal feeding
pattern of the birds. In fact, some researchers are not
convinced that birds are the primary peppered moth
predators in nature. Also, some researchers (although
not Kettlewell himself) have conducted experiments by
using dead moths glued to tree trunks, a practice that
has been criticized by some observers. Furthermore,
many researchers considered the method by which
Kettlewell assessed the degree of moth camouflage to be
overly subjective. This bias would call into question
the entire body of data.
These criticisms bring
into question the entire issue of selective bird
predation being the driving
force behind this so-called splendid example of natural
selection. Without an observable, defined environmental
factor to push the peppered moth to “evolve,” the famous
moth could not even be a candidate to be used as
evidence to support Darwin’s theory.
So what should we deduce
from all of this information? Good scientists must
examine and reexamine the methods and techniques used to
study our world. Those who would be too critical of
Kettlewell should proceed with some caution. There has
been much written in both the pro-evolution and the
pro-creation camps that has been very critical of
Kettlewell. Some of this seems justified, but much of
it does not, particularly the accusation that he
falsified his data. There
can be no more serious accusation made against a
scientist, so it would seem that more proof is needed
before that charge be made. After all, others involved
in this area have collected data which validates
Kettlewell’s original conclusions. No one can know
another’s heart, so some measure of charity needs be
given here. Perhaps
Kettlewell’s shortcomings can best be measured by this
quote from a colleague who characterized him as “the
best naturalist I have ever met, and almost the worst
professional scientist I have ever known.”
So does all this debate
about the validity of Kettlewell’s peppered moth data
really pose a problem for creationists? The
evolutionist claims that the peppered moth story is such
a shining example of evolution in action that to
question it is to demonstrate unwillingness to accept
proven science. Majerus has said, “The peppered moth
story is easy to understand because it involves things
that we are familiar with: vision and predation and
birds and moths and pollution and camouflage and lunch
and death. That is why the anti-evolution lobby attacks
the peppered moth story. They are frightened that too
many will be able to understand.”
So how difficult should
it be to understand? To the creationist, it is very
simple. Over the last 150 years, moths have changed
into moths! The creationist has no difficulty with this
process. On the other hand, what is not to understand?
According to de Roode, “the peppered moth was, and is,
a well understood example of evolution by natural
selection.” The creationist would agree that this
population change represents natural selection.
However, this change is most certainly not
molecules-to-man evolution. Natural selection and
molecules-to-man evolution are not the same thing, and
many are led astray by the misuse of these terms.
Natural selection can
easily be seen in nature. Natural selection produces
the variations within a kind of organism. Thanks to
natural selection, we have the marvelous variety of
creatures that we see in our world. However, in this
process, fish change into (amazingly) fish, birds change
into birds, dogs change into dogs, and moths change into
moths. If, during the process of the study of peppered
moths, the moths had changed into some other type of
creature, a bird perhaps, then we might have something
to talk about.
No amount of posturing by
the evolutionist can change the fact that these moths
are still moths and will continue to be moths. The
variation seen is simply the result of sorting and
resorting of the genetic material present in the
original moths. At no time has there been any new
information introduced into the genome of the moth,
which is what molecules-to-man evolution requires.
There is no evidence of the beginnings of an
intermediate form between the present moth and the
creature into which it is destined to evolve. Moths
stay moths, fish stay fish, and people stay people,
regardless of the great variety seen within each.
Ultimately, the peppered
moth story is more of the same. Although much of the
clamor surrounding Kettlewell’s work has made for good
reading and, in some ways, has made for good science,
the results are clear. There is nothing here, in even
the smallest way, to provide evidence for the process of
molecules-to-man evolution. That is what the
creationist is “able to understand.”
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