- Vicar of Bray (scientific hypothesis)
"The Vicar of Bray" is the name given to a hypothesis attempting to explain why sexual reproduction might be favoured over asexual reproduction, in which sexual populations are able to outcompete asexual populations because they evolve more rapidly in response to environmental changes. The offspring of a population of sexually reproducing individuals will show a more varied selection of
phenotype s and that they will therefore be more likely to produce a strain that can survive a change in the ecology of the environment in which they live. Under the Vicar of Bray Hypothesis, sex benefits a population as a whole, but not individuals within it, making it a case ofgroup selection . [Wilson, David Sloan and Scott K. Gleeson. "A Big Book on Sex" (1982) Society for the Study of Evolution] [Tannenbaum, Emmanuel and José F. Fontanari. "A quasispecies approach to the evolution of sexual replication in unicellular organisms", "Theory in Biosciences", Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, ISSN 1431-7613, Issue Volume 127, Number 1, March 2008]The theory was named after
The Vicar of Bray , a fictional cleric who retained his ecclesiastic office by quickly adapting to the prevailing religious winds, switching between Protestant and Catholic rites as the ruling monarch changed.Ridley, Matt. "The Red Queen – Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature" (1993), Penguin Books ISBN 0060556579] A mathematized version of this theory was accepted by most biologists as being one of the most important reasons for the prevalence of sexual reproduction in the natural world until the implicit group selectionist character of the argument was re-examined in the course of The Williams Revolution. However, a more popular explanation for the evolutionary origin and maintenance of sex is currently theRed Queen Hypothesis , which instead proposes that sex benefits individuals directly.Notes
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