4.5 Article

Biological adaptation in light of the Lewontin-Williams (a)symmetry

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 76, Issue 7, Pages 1619-1624

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14502

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Neo-Darwinism sees biological adaptation as a one-sided process, while Niche Construction Theory highlights the mutual influence between organisms and their environments. Williams' asymmetry focuses on the directed modifications towards phenotypes that increase individual fitness.
Neo-Darwinism characterizes biological adaptation as a one-sided process, in which organisms adapt to their environment but not vice versa. This asymmetric relationship-here called Williams' asymmetry-is called into question by Niche Construction Theory, which emphasizes that organisms and their environments often mutually affect each other. Here, we clarify that Williams' asymmetry is specifically concerned with (quasi)-directed modifications toward phenotypes that increase individual fitness. This directedness-which drives the adaptive fit between organism and environment-entails far more than the mere presence of cause-effect relationships. We argue that difficulties with invoking fitness as the guiding principle of adaptive evolution are resolved with an appropriate definition of fitness and that objections against Williams' asymmetry reflect confusions about the nature of biological adaptation.

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