Evolution, Genetic Conflict, and the Parliament of Genes

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 153

  • @StatedClearly
    @StatedClearly  Год назад +24

    Links to papers are in the video description, along with info on why honey bees don't use a 50/50 sex ratio. The math behind all this is awesome!
    Also, I don't know why RUclips says my posters are "Unisex" but I suppose it is true: ruclips.net/user/StatedClearlystore

    • @rifz42
      @rifz42 Год назад +3

      thank you! I found your channel from your recent interview where you talked about how to debunk science by making a better picture with the puzzle pieces that don't fit right. Could you make a video about that please? I thought it was a very interesting idea!
      I think I didn't word that well, but I hope you understand.

    • @sanumk359
      @sanumk359 Год назад

      thanks for getting back... btw can u tell what's the name for this type of animation?

  • @angga2oioi
    @angga2oioi Год назад +67

    I thought I lost you, glad to have you back

  • @ToroidalX
    @ToroidalX Год назад +48

    I was missing this videos so badly. You always explain this topics with such a simplicity, is amazing. Thank you

  • @viktorsaurus
    @viktorsaurus Год назад +38

    From the design to the science, this is an excellent video 👏

  • @nikitagupta6164
    @nikitagupta6164 Год назад +5

    You outdo your ability to state clearly with each video, and without "dumbing down". Really restores my faith in science communication and outreach. Sometimes it feels like it's just too hard to draw people in, not just those outside academia, but also those within it all lost to different niches. And here you are, demonstrating that everything can be stated clearly, and that it can be beautiful too. Thank you

  • @AndyMcBlane
    @AndyMcBlane Год назад +18

    Woohoo another Stated Clearly! Absolutely in awe at your communication and animation skills, they go hand in hand so well (cooperation of genes? ;) )

  • @Rod1712
    @Rod1712 Год назад +6

    The parallelism that occurs at the biomolecular level and in situations between organisms is amazing 😮

  • @JohnComeOnMan
    @JohnComeOnMan Год назад +12

    Couldn't have stated it more clearly. 😎👍

  • @thelostone6981
    @thelostone6981 Год назад +4

    This reminds me of a joke my dad use to tell; diarrhea and DNA runs in Levi’s 501 jeans. I never got it, but I am glad to see a new video by Stated Clearly! Please keep producing these videos! I love learning these things.

  • @agronomist98
    @agronomist98 Год назад +3

    Best way to make a complicated facts turns to simple explanation, always support your great work from Malaysia 🇲🇾✨

  • @ricebunnymoon4624
    @ricebunnymoon4624 Год назад +3

    Don’t stop posting don leave us without these videos 😭

  • @Nirhuman
    @Nirhuman Год назад +12

    Interesting to think about how this mechanism applies on the level of society as well. There are selfish elements: thieves, narcisists, corruption, etc. and clutures that evolve defenses against them, outcompete cultures that dont

  • @leadersofthenewschool
    @leadersofthenewschool Год назад +3

    Yesss new vid this is the only channel i have notifications for

  • @mr.spinoza
    @mr.spinoza Год назад +4

    Fascinating video. Welcome back!

  • @Happy_Abe
    @Happy_Abe Год назад +5

    What an amazing video, absolutely loved it!

  • @DarrenGedye
    @DarrenGedye Год назад +2

    Excellent as usual! ❤️ The _wonderful_ thing about the internet is being able to access the very best teachers on any subject (such as you) from anywhere in the world. The _tragedy_ is that as a society we generally use it to spread misinformation, hatred, and create echo chambers. 😥 You shine like a star in a very dark sky.

  • @PulseCodeMusic
    @PulseCodeMusic Год назад +2

    Not the most regular channel but always top quality educational content. Keep it up!

  • @nagranoth_
    @nagranoth_ Год назад +5

    I don't think fitness is confusing at all, it's how well you fit in your environment. If you fit better, you've got a higher chance of surviving and procreating and thus passing on genes.
    It's just that people try to bring in the concept of fitness from sports, which is a really weird word that has nothing to do with fitting at all.

  • @ellishall204
    @ellishall204 Год назад +2

    Thanks!

  • @kopognr2
    @kopognr2 Год назад +1

    Great to see you back! please keep it up.
    And PLEEEASE upload weekly.. just some 10 second video will do. It helps ppl discover the channel. The strategy of doing a handful uploads a year is flawed.

  • @Blabla130
    @Blabla130 Год назад +6

    Tom Scott is a biologist too?! He never ceases to impress!

  • @redpower6956
    @redpower6956 Год назад +1

    Please keep creating these amazing videos! I love learning about these topics.

  • @gowtham7231
    @gowtham7231 11 месяцев назад

    Wow. Your videos are great. I read The Selfish Gene years before and till date I was unable to grasp the real meaning of the book. Your videos are helping me a lot.

    • @Dr.Ian-Plect
      @Dr.Ian-Plect 8 месяцев назад +1

      A baseline understanding of evolution is preferable before reading TSG.

  • @R1ck1T1ck1
    @R1ck1T1ck1 Год назад +1

    As always another great video!

  • @Ugly_German_Truths
    @Ugly_German_Truths Год назад +6

    The complete explanation was excellent. I just do not like the image of the "parliament" as it is too close to introducing "consciousness" into the idea of evolution again, which is one of the biggest stumbling stones for the creationists ability to understand what actually happens.
    When you let go of that image and explained it with stochastics (the "by now mostly only males witht he mutation will be around" part) the explanation was much more poignant to remove such problematic ideas from the whole concept.

    • @Cat_Woods
      @Cat_Woods Год назад +1

      I had a similar concern about the parliament concept. I could just hear people misunderstanding and misrepresenting it in the back of my head. If it helps some people understand, then I won't begrudge them that, but when you see what creationists have done with the basic "selfish gene" concept, you know that misunderstanding and misrepresentation runs the whole parliament of humanity. 🙄🙂

  • @antojames9387
    @antojames9387 Год назад

    Please keep uploading videos in this channel. This is your best arena than any other.

  • @VentusGamingX
    @VentusGamingX Год назад +2

    You're back ❤️

  • @blzrdphoto
    @blzrdphoto Год назад +2

    This blew my mind.

  • @luisaugustobonilha8210
    @luisaugustobonilha8210 Год назад +1

    I really love these animations, they help a lot !

  • @vidyasagar7357
    @vidyasagar7357 Год назад +2

    Welcome back🎉

  • @abdulmajedkurdi5691
    @abdulmajedkurdi5691 Год назад

    When I discovered your channel , i wish that there is a thousand video to watch ,, your videos are so fun and u made a hard things much easier to understand ,, thank u

  • @Googlemarsjameshubble
    @Googlemarsjameshubble Год назад

    This is the moment I have been waiting for glad you are back.

  • @alexb2082
    @alexb2082 Год назад

    Checked the description for Mutualism posters and was not disappointed!

  • @backstreetfan2887
    @backstreetfan2887 Год назад +1

    great video, thanks

  • @brittanyjacobson5199
    @brittanyjacobson5199 Год назад +1

    very clear
    love your channel

  • @sofia.eris.bauhaus
    @sofia.eris.bauhaus Год назад +5

    so basically it's nothing like a parliament 😅.

  • @drosophilamelanogaster9488
    @drosophilamelanogaster9488 Год назад +1

    I learned lots, thanks

  • @anthonynelson6249
    @anthonynelson6249 Год назад +1

    I certainly understand how natural selection “selects” traits that make a creature fit its environment, but I don’t understand the mechanisms by which those traits form in the first place. It’s so hard for me to believe that genetic mutations are the only mechanism. Call it reducible complexity, call it whatever-it seems like these systems have to develop through a more mediated/intentional process.

  • @MaryAnnNytowl
    @MaryAnnNytowl Год назад

    Interesting, complex subject, but great explanation that's easy to understand. Thanks!

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Год назад +1

    Great video, thanks so much

  • @aripocki
    @aripocki Год назад +2

    It's such a strange topic to expound upon because in the grand scheme, both selfish and suppressor genes work under the same principle - both genes are actively promote propagation of their own kind. It's hard to ever see selfish genes as a "flaw" in evolution in the first place!

  • @disarmyouwitha
    @disarmyouwitha Год назад +1

    VERY interesting

  • @chizpa305
    @chizpa305 Год назад

    Love this channel.

  • @jaykhalid2374
    @jaykhalid2374 Год назад +1

    WELCOME BACKKKK

  • @Thundzz
    @Thundzz Год назад

    Amazing video as always ! Thank you so much !

  • @jim409
    @jim409 Год назад

    Awesome video.. hope you continue to meke vids

  • @rosemadder5547
    @rosemadder5547 Год назад

    I get dorky excited when I find great channels for my sons homeschooling 😂

  • @Eric-zi3wc
    @Eric-zi3wc Год назад

    This is an abstract yet brilliant concept

  • @benediktk.8228
    @benediktk.8228 Год назад

    Very well done! Reminded me a lot of a few chapters in Richard Dawkins' book The extended phenotype.

  • @randomguy-sq4oi
    @randomguy-sq4oi Год назад +2

    enother great video

  • @Googlemarsjameshubble
    @Googlemarsjameshubble Год назад

    Welcome back knowledge King John Perry

  • @DeconvertedMan
    @DeconvertedMan Год назад +2

    10:11 Badger Badger Badger MUSHROOM MUSHROOM.

  • @runrickyrun157
    @runrickyrun157 Год назад

    Great video! Love your presentation.

  • @arjunkhedkar942
    @arjunkhedkar942 Год назад

    I was reading a book called genome and was stuck on this concept for a few days... And then tbis vidro shows up

  • @romeosaldana
    @romeosaldana Год назад

    Thanks a lot for your video, I use them in my Ecology course

  • @WhyYoutubeWhy
    @WhyYoutubeWhy Год назад

    Super interesting, thank you!

  • @scientistx5717
    @scientistx5717 Год назад +5

    Ahhh politics even dna cannot escape from this dasdardly satanic subject

  • @TheyCallMeNewb
    @TheyCallMeNewb Год назад

    So striking at how well-drawn the human faces are each time.

  • @swipe7249
    @swipe7249 Год назад

    So cool. Never thought about genes this way.

  • @alzohairy
    @alzohairy Год назад

    Great video! I like your presentation, could you please send me the ppt to use it in my teaching class 🙏

  • @vratyasvakyas6022
    @vratyasvakyas6022 Год назад +1

    Finally! 🥳 🎉

  • @user-xn3js2bw4h
    @user-xn3js2bw4h Год назад

    How very interesting!

  • @maxjohn6012
    @maxjohn6012 Год назад

    Well done, that was a great video :)

  • @eHanlinWilliam
    @eHanlinWilliam Год назад

    Welcome back!

  • @arvin_diamante
    @arvin_diamante Год назад

    So crystal clear❤❤❤

  • @numericalcode
    @numericalcode Год назад

    This one is really deep

  • @kaid_shadowsong
    @kaid_shadowsong Год назад

    Thanks a lot

  • @damjantarkanyi9479
    @damjantarkanyi9479 Год назад +1

    same dynamic as foxes eating rabbits and rabbits multiplying.

  • @oscarsilva1676
    @oscarsilva1676 Год назад

    Beautiful video, I love it.

  • @ifbut_then
    @ifbut_then Год назад

    Thank youuuuuuu for the awesomeeeee video

  • @sanumk359
    @sanumk359 Год назад

    thanks for getting back... btw anybody knows what's the name for this type of animation?

  • @lop2167
    @lop2167 Год назад

    You should read "mutual aid: a factor in evolution" by peter kropotkin

  • @Homo_sAPEien
    @Homo_sAPEien Год назад +2

    4:13 So, karma is real. Who would’ve thought?

  • @Blabla130
    @Blabla130 Год назад +4

    Anyway I was expecting you to give the example of Cancer when it comes to cheating genes. Wouldn't this model expect us to have super anti cancer policing genes?
    Also, regarding sex ratios - given such a strong pressure for suppressors policing variation in sex ratios, how to we see species with extreme sex ratios - lets say hive organisms like ants and bees - come about?
    (be be clear - I'm not poopooing the idea, just wondering if they address these cases)

    • @StatedClearly
      @StatedClearly  Год назад +10

      Cancer is a great example of cheating at the cellular. Turns out we actually get mild cancers all the time, but our immune system acts like police, stopping them from going crazy. Cancer only becomes a problem when the cancer cells evolve enough to escape our many defenses.

    • @StatedClearly
      @StatedClearly  Год назад +6

      There are many environmental and genetic situations that can favor unusual sex ratios. In the case of bees, they have Haplodiploid genomes which automatically triggers selection for a 1:3 ratio of males to females, vs a 1:1 ratio. I just added several papers on that in video description for you under the heading "FURTHER READING".

    • @Blabla130
      @Blabla130 Год назад

      @@StatedClearly Thank you so much!
      I admit that I'm not trained in the academic language of biology, so it was tough for me, but it was very interesting!

    • @agustinfranco0
      @agustinfranco0 Год назад +1

      also, there are a lot of genes that stop cancer, and some even detect their own cell is turning and trigger cell death. cancer is having bad enough luck that all those things get mutated or overcomed just enough to make cancer possible.

    • @clovebeans713
      @clovebeans713 10 месяцев назад

      There are anti cancer genes like the tumor suppressor genes and certain species like Elephants almost never get cancer because they have multiple copies of such genes. There cancer cells being formed all the time but there are many steps it needs to take to become dangers.

  • @Fyusion7
    @Fyusion7 Год назад

    damn he's back

  • @DavidGS66
    @DavidGS66 Год назад

    I suggest a video explaing how our ancestors went from 1 hermaphrodite sex to 2 sexes. AIS is when XY fetus becomes largely female.

  • @ParlonsEvolution
    @ParlonsEvolution Год назад

    Incredible! ^^

  • @agustinfranco0
    @agustinfranco0 Год назад

    just one thought, this idea still makes it sound a little too much like the genome reacts to the variation, instead of selecting the now extremely important police gene.

  • @baconsarny-geddon8298
    @baconsarny-geddon8298 Год назад +2

    Wait... So it's NOT because of an invisible man, with unlimited, blank-cheque magical powers?
    Are you SURE? That doesn't sound right!!

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 Год назад

    I love how you used both pronunciations of coyote

  • @Overonator
    @Overonator Год назад +1

    Can't cancerous tumors be cheating as well but within the same organism?

    • @stuwest666
      @stuwest666 Год назад

      You could think of cancer that way, but expect in a couple of cases where cancer is transmittable (e.g. in Tasmanian devils), it isn't passed on, so fitness =0, so can be easier just to think of most types cancer as an error that spreads in short term. That lets you use 'cheats' for things that really successfully cheat and can be maintained.

  • @MsBialik
    @MsBialik Год назад

    How can I get the posters?

  • @galaxygirl1034
    @galaxygirl1034 Год назад

    can you please do one on plasmids?

  • @karinaramos2222
    @karinaramos2222 Год назад

    Fascinating 😍🙌🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 🇦🇷❤️

  • @manfredgebhardt6562
    @manfredgebhardt6562 15 дней назад

    Magnetismus und Elektrischer Strom besteht aus allem.

  • @jm505
    @jm505 Год назад +2

    The anthropomorphism of evolution is continuously frustrating. “Natural selection selects for what works…” No, there is no subject named “natural selection” that “selects” anything. Individuals succeed or fail at surviving within a given context. There is zero intentionality or purpose in the mechanisms behind the theory of natural selection.

  • @manfredgebhardt6562
    @manfredgebhardt6562 15 дней назад

    Alle Atome kann man Irgendwie verbinden

  • @NatCo-Supremacist
    @NatCo-Supremacist Год назад +1

    This is proof that individualism isn't real.

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz Год назад

    I wish you did not use the metaphor "parliament of genes", it confuses everything. It's rather dynamic equilibrium because the conflict is rather war than negotiation, let alone voting.
    Anyway, it raises the question: doesn't the suppressor gene introduce another imbalance? Who polices the police? And if there is such war of imbalances, could not this actually lead to unnecessarily complex "internal warfare" within the genetic pool, which is ultimately the species or population affected as a whole, and cause problems that could lead to extinction or otherwise inefficiency in the population? My guess is that it does and that more research is needed.

  • @mauricemenard2243
    @mauricemenard2243 8 месяцев назад

    The thief who stole my car told the judge that he believed evolution created my car because it was easier to make a car than to create life. Verdic judge = Even if this is true, reality surpasses fiction. Life in the hell of his mind and 2 years in state prison.

  • @samgrainger1554
    @samgrainger1554 Год назад

    It's not the genes that are the replicators. It's just that they often replicate.

  • @lesliesylvan
    @lesliesylvan Год назад

    What the heck do rare altruism among different mammal specie have to do with Parliamentary genetics?
    AND wouldn't the role of pheromones picking up the mutant male genetics help keep away female fruit flies, as a major additional evolutionary protection from an overly populated one-sided gender?

  • @gibson2049
    @gibson2049 Год назад +1

    ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @Sam_Sam2
    @Sam_Sam2 Год назад

    Let’s go

  • @coenmuller6438
    @coenmuller6438 Год назад

    Could elaborate more on your definition of the 'gene parlement'? I would like to know more on how the genome 'thinks' and produces policing genes

    • @Xartab
      @Xartab Год назад

      The point is, it doesn't. Policing genes are random mutations (like all mutations), except that by their nature they "parasite on the parasite". A bit like a knight getting all the loot as well as a plot of land from the king after defeating the violent invaders that were terrorising the kingdom.
      Of course this second order of parasitic mutation could be even more detrimental to the whole population rather than do any policing, but that would simply lead to itself becoming extinct in the population, if not even extinguishing the species altogether.

    • @chocomilkfps1264
      @chocomilkfps1264 Год назад +3

      Video clearly answers those questions just so you know

    • @SKy_the_Thunder
      @SKy_the_Thunder Год назад +1

      tl/dw: it happens randomly without any "reason" or "decision". but once it exists, it actively benefits from the distortion caused by the cheating gene, making it much more likely to spread than its non-policing counterpart, until an equilibrium is reached again.

    • @WorthlessWinner
      @WorthlessWinner Год назад

      As the video says, genes appear to benefit the whole by evolving 'policing' functions but they are just benefitting themselves, as any carrier of a policing gene will have more offspring and spread more copies of that gene. If most genes would benefit from mutating a policing function then the chance of a policing functioning evolving is higher as any of the genes could evolve that as a secondary function. I prefer to think of it more as a lottery with many tickets, the more genes who would benefit from a policing function the more tickets.

  • @nsTurkish
    @nsTurkish Год назад

    Turkish subtitles please

  • @hikaru9898
    @hikaru9898 Год назад +1

    I want to translate in Arabic

  • @joszsz
    @joszsz Год назад

    4:05 😂😂😂

  • @krensparxx2165
    @krensparxx2165 Год назад

    Am lost in da sauce..😂😂

  • @kellyh9621
    @kellyh9621 Год назад +1

    This video was full of weird allegories that made it even harder to understand gene evolution

    • @Angelmou
      @Angelmou Год назад

      So...according to you when birds peck caterpillars, a storm blows some away from the bush as food source, when mold spreads over eggs and puppae to stop them from hatching or when the leaves mutate more diffcult digestive enzymes or even poison to stopp the caterpillars from the feeding - it shall all be an optical illusion? Do you also think the moon and the sun are believes?

    • @Rod1712
      @Rod1712 Год назад +2

      Science is a way of thinking.