Sex Seems Like a Waste—So Why Do So Many Creatures Need It to Reproduce ?

/sex-is-a-coping-mechanism

  • Sex Is a Coping Mechanism - Issue 34: Adaptation
    http://nautil.us/issue/34/adaptation/sex-is-a-coping-mechanism

    Ask any biologist—sex seems like a waste. It’s costly: Think of the enormous energy that goes into producing a peacock’s spectacular fan-shaped tail, apparently meant to entice a female to mate with him. And it seems inefficient: Sex allows us to pass on only half of our genes, and fully half the species (males) can’t bear children. Evolution is unsentimental, so those costs must bring benefits. The usual answer is that, by reshuffling genes with every generation, sex creates new genetic combinations, detaches beneficial mutations from harmful ones and gives a species a degree of evolutionary flexibility. It keeps genes in the pool that might not be of use today, but might save a creature’s descendants from plagues, pestilence, and parasites. All that is probably true, but the thesis has (...)