BIOL359 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Adaptation, Statistical Hypothesis Testing, Bird Louse

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An adaptation is a trait that increases the tness of an individual in comparison to individuals that don"t possess the trait. The bene ts of some adaptations might appear to be obvious, but in order to demonstrate that a trait is adaptive, we require evidence. In many instances, gathering that evidence can be challenging. It requires us to carefully develop and test hypotheses. Hypothesis testing lies at the core of evolutionary biology, and science in general. While untested hypotheses may be interesting and intriguing, they do not constitute evidence. Sometimes the adaptive value of a trait might seem readily apparent, but until the hypothesis of adaptive value is tested and con rmed, it is not supported by evidence. This section provides an example of why untested hypotheses cannot be considered as evidence, but rather can mislead into false beliefs. There are three approaches that evolutionary biologists employ to test hypotheses concerning adaptation: experimental, observational, and comparative.

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