Processes and patterns of interaction as units of selection: An introduction to ITSNTS thinking

W. Ford Doolittle, S. Andrew Inkpen

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículo de revisiónrevisión exhaustiva

80 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Many practicing biologists accept that nothing in their discipline makes sense except in the light of evolution, and that natural selection is evolution's principal sense-maker. But what natural selection actually is (a force or a statistical outcome, for example) and the levels of the biological hierarchy (genes, organisms, species, or even ecosystems) at which it operates directly are still actively disputed among philosophers and theoretical biologists. Most formulations of evolution by natural selection emphasize the differential reproduction of entities at one or the other of these levels. Some also recognize differential persistence, but in either case the focus is on lineages of material things: even species can be thought of as spatiotemporally restricted, if dispersed, physical beings. Few consider-as “units of selection” in their own right-the processes implemented by genes, cells, species, or communities. “It's the song not the singer” (ITSNTS) theory does that, also claiming that evolution by natural selection of processes is more easily understood and explained as differential persistence than as differential reproduction. ITSNTS was formulated as a response to the observation that the collective functions of microbial communities (the songs) are more stably conserved and ecologically relevant than are the taxa that implement them (the singers). It aims to serve as a useful corrective to claims that “holobionts” (microbes and their animal or plant hosts) are aggregate “units of selection,” claims that often conflate meanings of that latter term. But ITSNS also seems broadly applicable, for example, to the evolution of global biogeochemical cycles and the definition of ecosystem function.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)4006-4014
Número de páginas9
PublicaciónProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volumen115
N.º16
DOI
EstadoPublished - 2018

Nota bibliográfica

Funding Information:
We thank Austin Booth, Carlos Mariscal, Tyler Brunet, Scott McCain, Letitia Meynell, Richmond Campbell, Elliott Sober, and Andrew Hendry for comments on earlier drafts. This work was supported by Grant GLDSU447989 from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

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