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People refer to "Darwin's finches" from time to
time as a symbol of evolution
in the Gal�pagos Islands, but the father of evolutionary theory actually dropped
the ball on those birds, collecting better details on mockingbirds, tortoises
and other species.
Charles Darwin's
observations, notes and collected organisms from the Galapagos Islands during
his 5-year voyage on the Beagle resulted in his theory of evolution by
natural selection, one of the best substantiated theories in the history of
science.
He collected several finch species, including the warbler
finch, sharp-beaked finch, ground finch, small tree finch, large tree finch,
common cactus finch and large ground finch.
But Darwin failed to note which islands each particular
finch came from. He tried to make up for the deficit by borrowing some finch notes
taken by the Beagle's Captain Robert FitzRoy, but Darwin hardly
mentioned the finches in his later writing.
Upon Darwin's return to London, experts informed him that
many of the specimens he had thought included different birds were all finches
that looked different from one another.
Nonetheless, this variation helped Darwin arrive at his
understanding that the finches and other birds had adapted to the islands and
specific environments where they live, leading to the theory that species are
not fixed and unchanging; instead, they evolve over time from common ancestors.
The moniker "Darwin's finches" was popularized in
1947 as a tribute to Darwin by ornithologist David Lack, who published the
first modern biological study of the finches, according to Robert Rothman of
the Rochester Institute of Technology.
In the past few decades, biologists Peter and Rosemary Grant
of Princeton University have studied finch
populations and showed that the average beak sizes of successive generations changed
to adapt to new food sources on Daphne Major, an island in the Gal�pagos.
All About
Evolution
Image
Gallery: Charles Darwin
Darwin's
Finches Evolve Before Scientists' Eyes
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