If mutations are usually not beneficial, how could we have evolved from monkeys?

September 26, 2014

A middle school student from California asks:

"Since DNA mutations usually do not make us healthier, how can we have mutated from monkeys? Or did monkeys really mutate from us?"

This is a great question. Let’s start with humans and monkeys.

Modern monkeys and humans both mutated from a monkey-like ancestor that is now extinct. So humans didn’t come from monkeys and monkeys didn’t come from humans. Instead, our common ancestor split into multiple groups.

You are right that the development of different species (speciation) is driven by changes (mutations) in DNA. You’re also right that most mutations either have no effect or are harmful. But every so often a mutation comes along that is actually helpful, and these mutations can really drive speciation.

One example of a helpful mutation is lactose tolerance — the ability to drink milk as an adult. You might be surprised to learn that only around one quarter of adults alive today can drink milk. This ability is the result of a mutation that has been around in humans for a long time.

Pitcher of milk.
Being able to digest milk as an adult is a relatively recently evolved trait in humans. Via Shutterstock

For most of our history, this mutation would be described as neutral — neither helpful nor harmful. A few people had it but, since no one was drinking milk into adulthood, it didn’t matter much either way. 

But then people started to use milk from animals as food. For reasons we don’t understand, this was a game changer in places like northern Europe. People with this mutation had better survival than people without it. They had more children, who also had the mutation and also survived better. In the end, pretty much everyone in this area could drink milk as an adult.

Of course the ability to drink milk didn’t make Europeans into a new species! But if they had stayed isolated and built up a bunch of other DNA differences, then they might have. Just like humans and chimpanzees, who drifted apart 6 million or so years ago.

Health vs. Fitness

Let’s get back to your question. First off, it’s important to know that mutations are pretty common.

When animals have kids, they make copies of their DNA. This process sometimes makes mistakes in the copies, and those mistakes are mutations. Mutations can also happen when DNA is exposed to certain chemicals or to the UV rays in sunlight.

As you pointed out, most mutations don’t make species healthier, but I’m going to be a bit nit-picky. Instead of talking about health, I’m going to talk about “fitness”. This is what really drives evolution.

When biologists talk about fitness, they’re not talking about how fast an animal can run or how many push-ups it can do. “Fitness” in the evolutionary sense describes how well an animal does in a certain environment. 

Polar bears may be great in the Arctic, but in the desert they will lose out to a camel every time. A polar bear is more fit in the cold and a camel is more fit in the desert.

When we think about mutations making new species, we need to think about fitness. In other words, does a genetic mutation make an animal more or less fit for its environment?

Helpful mutations make animals more fit for their environment. This increase in fitness could be very small, but it gives that animal an advantage. And since most animals are living right on the edge of survival, even a small boost helps.

A giraffe with a slightly longer neck that can stretch just a little bit higher will be able to eat leaves that other giraffes can’t reach. By getting more food, that giraffe is more likely to survive and have more kids than its short-necked brethren.

Not only will the long-necked giraffes have more kids, those kids will inherit the long-neck mutation and have longer necks too. The ones with the longest necks will do better than any short-necked giraffes.

Giraffe.
Giraffes’ long necks allow them to reach a food source that few other animals in their environment can reach. This gives them a fitness advantage. Via Shutterstock

Over time, that population will get longer and longer necks until having a longer neck is not an advantage (the giraffes are taller than the trees) or becomes a disadvantage (their necks are too long to get blood up to the brain).

Animals with helpful mutations are more fit, and are more likely to survive and have kids. Those kids will have the same mutation that their parents had, and the helpful mutations will spread.

Animals with harmful mutations are less fit, and are less likely to survive and have kids. This is why harmful mutations are usually lost eventually.

Over time, this means that helpful mutations will spread and harmful mutations will be lost. Neutral mutations will stick around until they become helpful or harmful. Or they may even disappear due to chance.

An Evolutionary Tail

Now let’s talk about humans and monkeys specifically. Remember that modern monkeys and humans both evolved from a monkey-like ancestor. That ancestor lived in environments that ranged from thick forests to open grasslands.

Imagine one group of these monkey-like ancestors living deep in the forest. In a forest you want to be able to move through the trees. This means that animals with longer arms and tails, and lots of upper body strength would do better than animals with short arms and tails.

The individuals with the “right stuff” for the forest would do better and so go on to have more kids. And these kids would have long tails and arms and a lot of upper body strength.

Any weaker individuals, with short arms and short tails would not do as well. They would have fewer kids than the better-adapted (fitter) animals, and these kids would be less likely to survive.

Over time, there would be more and more of the first kind of animal and less and less of the second kind. Eventually, all the animals would have long arms, long tails and lots of upper body strength.

Things would be different in the grasslands though. A group living here would require a different set of skills to those needed in the forest. In the grasslands, a long tail might get in the way and having a strong upper body might not be that useful.

Instead, animals in the grasslands need to be able to run well on the ground. Different traits would now be a better fit.

Now instead of needing long tails and strong arms to do well, you need strong legs and a shorter tail. This is just the opposite of what is needed in the forest.

But, just like what happened in the forest, the more fit animals would do better and become more common over time. Only this time the more fit ones have strong legs and short tails!

Neanderthal and monkey.
The environment surrounding our common ancestor drove the selection for different traits, eventually leading to the branching of the human and monkey lineages. Via WikimediaWikimedia

Like mutations giving giraffes longer necks, genetic mutations in our monkey-like ancestors gave some individuals an advantage. Individuals with those helpful mutations did better and had more kids so, eventually, several different groups developed.

Each group has mutated in a way that fits its environment.

Over time, the forest groups and the grassland groups built up mutations that made them fitter for the forest or the grassland. They became more and more different from each other and better and better adapted to their different environments.

Speciation of humans and monkeys.
The needs of different environments pressured the human/monkey ancestor to adapt to its environment, eventually leading to the speciation that led to modern monkeys and modern humans.

The two populations were isolated from each other and eventually built up so many genetic differences that they could no longer breed together. At this point, they became different species. Several million years later, their offspring became modern monkeys and modern humans.

We may think of humans as “healthier”, “better” or “more evolved” than monkeys, but those words don’t really mean much when we’re talking about evolution. In the thick forest, modern monkeys get around much more easily than modern humans. In other words, monkeys are just as fit as humans, they are just fit for a different environment.

Author: Mary Cavanagh

When this answer was published in 2014, Mary was a postdoctoral fellow in Jorg Goronzy’s laboratory, studying how and why white blood cells in the elderly respond less well to vaccination and infection. Mary wrote this article while participating in the Stanford at the Tech program. 

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