Trying2Bopen
Scholar
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2006
- Messages
- 52
I was asked in an oral examination this past week by an ecology prof:
“If an organism is shown to produce more beneficial mutations under stress, would that still be considered natural selection?”
I didn’t know how to answer the question and made something up that was probably wrong.
After the exam my prof explained to me that there are researchers attempting to demonstrate that bacteria produce beneficial mutations more frequently when stressed as a way to produce offspring that will be less stressed under the same situation. Does anyone know anything about this, and would it still be considered natural selection?
“If an organism is shown to produce more beneficial mutations under stress, would that still be considered natural selection?”
I didn’t know how to answer the question and made something up that was probably wrong.
After the exam my prof explained to me that there are researchers attempting to demonstrate that bacteria produce beneficial mutations more frequently when stressed as a way to produce offspring that will be less stressed under the same situation. Does anyone know anything about this, and would it still be considered natural selection?