Evolution And Bird
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Fourteen species of Darwins finches live in the Galapagos archipelago, and many of them differ most obviously in the sizes and shapes of their beaks. A finchs beak shape influences how efficiently it can feed on different types of food. The best evidence for this comes from a comparison of two species, the large-beaked Geospiza magnirostris and the smaller G. fortis , feeding on the same kind of hard fruit.
Ð* G. magnirostris (pictured opposite) has a large beak and can crack the fruit (called the mericarp) in only 2 seconds, exerting an average force of 26 kgf; it can then easily, in about 7 seconds, eat all the four to six seeds of the smashed fruit.
Ð* G. fortis are smaller and not strong enough to crack mericarps. Instead, they twist open the lower surface, applying a force of only 6 kgf and taking 7 seconds to reach the seeds inside; but only one or two of the seeds can be obtained in this way and it takes an average of 15 seconds to extract them.
Smaller finches are probably more efficient with smaller types of food, but this is more difficult to show. Both large and small finches on the Galapagos do in fact eat small seeds, though there is an indirect reason (as we shall see) to believe that smaller finches do so more efficiently.
In 1977, arid came to Galapagos, seed in small size sharply decrease. It makes the birds change their food to another kind of big seed. And this caused a large-scale death of the birds with a small beak and those who has a big beak survived. So here, we can see that the most important reason of the big-beak birds survival is because of they can adapt the change of the environment and we can see the natural selection displayed its function here.
Many people devote to the research natural evolution process, developsa special discipline – evolution biology.