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The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication

The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication is a book by Charles Darwin that was first published in January 1868.

The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication
Title page of the first edition of
The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication
AuthorCharles Darwin
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SubjectArtificial selection
PublisherJohn Murray
Publication date
30 January 1868
Media typePrint (hardback)
PagesVol 1: viii,411 +43 figs
Vol 2: viii,486.
OCLC960106244

A large proportion of the book contains detailed information on the domestication of animals and plants but it also contains in Chapter XXVII a description of Darwin's theory of heredity which he called pangenesis.

Background edit

Darwin had been working for two years writing his "big book", provisionally titled Natural Selection, when on 18 June 1858 he received a parcel from Alfred Wallace, who was then living in Borneo.[1] It enclosed a twenty pages manuscript describing an evolutionary mechanism that was similar to Darwin's own theory. Under pressure to publish his ideas, Darwin started work on an "abstract" summary, which was published in November 1859 as On the Origin of Species.[2] In the introduction he announced that in a future publication he hoped to give "in detail all the facts, with references, on which my conclusions have been grounded".[3]

On 9 January 1860, two days after the publication of the second edition of Origin, Darwin returned to his original Natural Selection manuscript and began expanding the first two chapters on "Variation under Domestication".[4] He had a large collection of additional notes and by the middle of June had written drafts of an introduction and two chapters on the domestication of pigeons that would eventually form part of The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication. Darwin apparently found writing the book tiresome and writes in his autobiography that he had been "tempted to publish on other subjects which at the time interested me more."[5] In the following July (1861) he began work on different book, the Fertilisation of Orchids which was published in May 1862.

Darwin continued to gather data. His own practical experiments were confined to plants but he was able to gather information from others by correspondence and even to arrange for some of his correspondents to conduct experiments on his behalf.[6][7] In spite of protracted periods of illness, he made progress and in March 1865 wrote to his publisher, John Murray, saying that "Of present book I have 7 chapters ready for press & all others very forward, except the last & concluding one" (the book as finally published consisted of 28 chapters).[8] In the same letter he discussed illustrations for the book.

Darwin had been mulling for many years on a theory of heredity.[9] In May 1865 he sent a manuscript to his friend Thomas Huxley outlining his theory which he called pangenesis and asking whether he should publish it. In his accompanying letter Darwin wrote "It is a very rash & crude hypothesis yet it has been a considerable relief to my mind, & I can hang on it a good many groups of facts."[10] Huxley pointed out the similarities of pangenesis to the theories of Georges Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, and the Swiss naturalist Charles Bonnet but eventually wrote encouraging Darwin to publish: "Somebody rummaging among your papers half a century hence will find Pangenesis & say 'See this wonderful anticipation of our modern Theories—and that stupid ass, Huxley, prevented his publishing them'".[11]

Publication edit

 
Rock dove or Columba livia, the parent form of all domesticated pigeons

Just before Christmas 1866 all of the manuscript except for the final chapter was sent to the publisher.[12] At the beginning January on receiving an estimate of the size of the two volume book from the printers he wrote to his publisher: "I cannot tell you how sorry I am to hear of the enormous size of my Book."[13] He subsequently arranged for some of the more technical sections to be set in smaller type.[14]

Even at this late stage Darwin was uncertain as to whether to include a chapter on mankind. At the end of January he wrote to Murray: "I feel a full conviction that my Chapter on man will excite attention & plenty of abuse & I suppose abuse is as good as praise for selling a Book"[15] but he then apparently decided against the idea for a week later in a letter to his close friend Joseph Hooker he explained "I began a chapter on Man, for which I have long collected materials, but it has grown too long, & I think I shall publish separately a very small volume, 'an essay on the origin of mankind'".[16] This "essay" would become two books: The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex (1871) and The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals (1872).

The book had been advertised as early as 1865 with the unwieldy title Domesticated Animals and Cultivated Plants, or the Principles of Variation, Inheritance, Reversion, Crossing, Interbreeding, and Selection under Domestication[17] but Darwin agreed to the shorter The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication suggested by the compositors.[14] By May he had arranged for the book to be translated into French, Russian and German.[14] The French edition would be translated by Jean Jacques Moulinié, the German by Julius Victor Carus who had produced the revised version of Origin in 1866 and the Russian edition by Vladimir Onufrievich Kovalevsky, the brother of the embryologist Alexander Kovalevsky.

Darwin received the first proofs on 1 March 1867.[18] In the tedious task of making correction he was helped by his 23-year-old daughter Henrietta Emma Darwin. In the summer while she was away in Cornwall he wrote to commend her work, "All your remarks, criticisms doubts & corrections are excellent, excellent, excellent".[19] While making corrections Darwin also added new material.[19] The proofs were finished on 15 November, but there was a further delay while William Dallas prepared an index.[14]

The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication went on sale on 30 January 1868, thirteen years after Darwin had begun his experiments on breeding and stewing the bones of pigeons. He was feeling deflated, and concerned about how these large volumes would be received, writing "if I try to read a few pages I feel fairly nauseated ... The devil take the whole book".[20] In his autobiography he estimated that he had spent 4-year 2 months "hard labour" on the book.[21]

Contents edit

 
English carrier pigeon – one of many domesticated varieties deriving from the wild Columba livia or rock dove

The first volume of The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication consists in a lengthy and highly detailed exploration of the mechanisms of variation, including the principle of use and disuse, the principle of the correlation of parts, and the role of the environment in causing variation, at work in a number of domestic species. Darwin starts with dogs and cats, discussing the similarities between wild and domesticated dogs, and musing on how the species changed to accommodate man's wishes. He attempts to trace a genealogy of contemporary varieties (or "races") back to a few early progenitors. These arguments, as well as many others, use the vast amount of data Darwin gathered about dogs and cats to support his overarching thesis of evolution through natural selection. He then goes on to make similar points regarding horses and donkeys, sheep, goats, pigs, cattle, various types of domesticated fowl, a large number of different cultivated plants, and, most thoroughly, pigeons.

Notably, in Chapter XXVII Darwin introduced his "provisional hypothesis" of pangenesis that he had first outlined to Huxley in 1865.[22] He proposed that each part of an organism contains minute invisible particles which he called gemmules. These were capable of regenerating the organism so that the leaf of a begonia or a worm chopped into pieces could generate the complete organism and a salamander or crab that lost a limb could regenerate the limb. The gemmules were dispersed around the organism and could multiply by division. In sexual reproduction they were transmitted from parents to their offspring with the mixing of the gemmules producing offspring with 'blended' characteristics of the parents. Gemmules could also remain dormant for several generations before becoming active. He also suggested that the environment might affect the gemmules in an organism and thus allowed for the possibility of the Lamarckian inheritance of acquired characteristics.[23][24] Darwin believed that his theory could explain a wide range of phenomena:

All the forms of reproduction graduate into each other and agree in their product; for it is impossible to distinguish between organisms produced from buds, from self-division, or from fertilised germs ... and as we now see that all the forms of reproduction depend on the aggregation of gemmules derived from the whole body, we can understand this general agreement. It is satisfactory to find that sexual and asexual generation ... are fundamentally the same. Parthenogenesis is no longer wonderful; in fact, the wonder is that it should not oftener occur.[25]

In the final pages of the book Darwin directly challenged the argument of divinely guided variation advocated by his friend and supporter the American botanist Asa Gray. He used the analogy of an architect using rocks which had broken off naturally and fallen to the foot of a cliff, asking "Can it be reasonably maintained that the Creator intentionally ordered ... that certain fragments should assume certain shapes so that the builder might erect his edifice?"[26] In the same way, breeders or natural selection picked those that happened to be useful from variations arising by "general laws", to improve plants and animals, "man included". Darwin concluded with: "However much we may wish it, we can hardly follow Professor Asa Gray in his belief that 'variation has been along certain beneficial lines,' like a 'stream along definite and useful lines of irrigation'".[27] Darwin confided to Hooker "It is foolish to touch such subjects, but there have been so many allusions to what I think about the part which God has played in the formation of organic beings, that I thought it shabby to evade the question."[16]

Reception edit

 
Spanish fowl

Darwin was concerned whether anyone would read the massive volumes and was also anxious to receive feedback from his friends on their views on pangenesis. In October 1867 before the book was published he sent copies of the corrected proofs to Asa Gray with the comment: "The chapter on what I call Pangenesis will be called a mad dream, and I shall be pretty well satisfied if you think it a dream worth publishing; but at the bottom of my own mind I think it contains a great truth."[28] He wrote to Hooker: "I shall be intensely anxious to hear what you think about Pangenesis"[29] and to the German naturalist Fritz Müller: "The greater part, as you will see, is not meant to be read; but I should very much like to hear what you think of 'Pangenesis'."[30] Few of Darwin's colleagues shared his enthusiasm for pangenesis.[31] Wallace was initially supportive and Darwin confided to him: "None of my friends will speak out, except to a certain extent Sir H. Holland, who found it very tough reading, but admits that some view 'closely akin to it' will have to be admitted."[32]

By the end of April Variation had received more than 20 reviews.[33] An anonymous review by George Henry Lewes in the Pall Mall Gazette praised its "noble calmness ... undisturbed by the heats of polemical agitation" which made the far from calm Darwin laugh, and left him "cock-a-hoop".[34]

In 1875 a second edition was published in which Darwin made a number of corrections and also reworked Chapter XI on Bud-variation and Chapter XXVII on Pangenesis. The book never became popular and sold only 5000 copies in Darwin's lifetime.[35][36]

De Vries in 1889 praised the "masterly survey of the phenomena to be explained" and accepted the idea that "the individual hereditary qualities of the whole organism are represented by definite material particles". He introduced the notion of intracellula pangenesis which, following August Weismann, rejected the idea that these particles were thrown off from all the cells of the body. He called the particles "pangens", later abbreviated to "gene".[37][38]

In a similar vein, Weismann in his 1893 work Germ-Plasm said "although Darwin modestly described his theory as a provisional hypothesis, his was, nevertheless, the first comprehensive attempt to explain all the known phenomena of heredity by a common principle ... [I]n spite of the fact that a considerable number of these assumptions are untenable, a part of the theory still remains which must be accepted as fundamental and correct,--in principle at any rate,--not only now but for all time to come. ... presupposing the existence of material particles in the germ which possess the properties of the living being ... I must honestly confess to having mentally resisted this fundamental point of the Darwinian doctrine for a long time."[39]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Darwin 1887, pp. 84–85 Vol. 1
  2. ^ Stauffer 1975, pp. 1–14
  3. ^ Darwin 1859, p. 2
  4. ^ Charles Darwin's journal for 1860, Darwin Online
  5. ^ Darwin 1887, p. 90 Vol. 1
  6. ^ Browne 2002, pp. 201–211
  7. ^ , Darwin Correspondence Project, archived from the original on 30 April 2008
  8. ^ Letter 4801 – Darwin, C. R. to Murray, John (b), 31 Mar (1865), Darwin Correspondence Project
  9. ^ Letter 5612 – Darwin, C. R. to Lyell, Charles, 22 Aug (1867), Darwin Correspondence Project
  10. ^ , Darwin Correspondence Project, archived from the original on 27 February 2008
    Letter 4837 – Darwin, C. R. to Huxley, T. H., 27 May (1865), Darwin Correspondence Project
  11. ^ Letter 4875 – Huxley, T. H. to Darwin, C. R., 16 July (1865), Darwin Correspondence Project
  12. ^ Charles Darwin's journal for 1866, Darwin Online
  13. ^ Letter 5346 – Darwin, C. R. to Murray, John (b), 3 Jan (1867), Darwin Correspondence Project
  14. ^ a b c d , Darwin Correspondence Project, archived from the original on 9 June 2008
  15. ^ Letter 5384 – Darwin, C. R. to Murray, John (b), 31 Jan (1867), Darwin Correspondence Project
  16. ^ a b Letter 5395 – Darwin, C. R. to Hooker, J. D., 8 Feb (1867), Darwin Correspondence Project
  17. ^ See Footnote 2 in Letter 4801 – Darwin, C. R. to Murray, John (b), 31 Mar (1865), Darwin Correspondence Project
  18. ^ Charles Darwin's journal for 1867, Darwin Online
  19. ^ a b Letter 5585 – Darwin, C. R. to Darwin, H. E., 26 July (1867), Darwin Correspondence Project
  20. ^ Letter 5835 – Darwin, C. R. to Hooker, J. D., 3 Feb (1868), Darwin Correspondence Project; Darwin 1887, p. 75 Vol. 3.
  21. ^ Darwin 1887, pp. 90, 93 Vol. 1
  22. ^ For a discussion of how Darwin arrived at his hypothesis see Olby (1985, pp. 84–85)
  23. ^ Browne 2002, pp. 282–284
  24. ^ Bowler 2003, pp. 199–200
  25. ^ Darwin 1868, p. 383
  26. ^ Darwin 1868, p. 431, Vol. 2; Browne 2002, p. 293
  27. ^ Darwin 1868, p. 432, Vol. 2
  28. ^ Letter 5649 – Darwin, C. R. to Gray, Asa, 16 Oct (1867), Darwin Correspondence Project
  29. ^ Letter 5680 – Darwin, C. R. to Hooker, J. D., 17 Nov (1867), Darwin Correspondence Project
  30. ^ Letter 5816 – Darwin, C. R. to Müller, J. F. T., 30 Jan (1868), Darwin Correspondence Project; Darwin 1887, p. 75, Vol 3
  31. ^ Browne 2002, p. 288
  32. ^ Letter 5940 – Darwin, C. R. to Wallace, A. R., 27 Feb (1868), Darwin Correspondence Project; Darwin & Seward 1903, p. 301, Vol 1
  33. ^ Introduction to Volume 16 (1868), Darwin Correspondence Project
  34. ^ Darwin 1887, p. 76, Vol 3; Letter 5856 – Darwin, C. R. to Hooker, J. D., 10 Feb (1868), Darwin Correspondence Project
  35. ^ Darwin 1875.
  36. ^ Browne 2002, p. 287.
  37. ^ De Vries, Hugo (1910) [German language edition published in 1889], Intracellular Pangenesis, trans. Cager, C. Stuart, Boston: Open Court, pp. 3, 5, OL 7215909M.
  38. ^ Written as pangene in the German text. De Vries, Hugo (1889), Intracellulare Pangenesis (in German), Jena: von Guetav Fischer, p. 6, OL 7227630M.
  39. ^ Weismann, August (1893), The Germ-Plasm. A Theory of Heredity, trans. Parker, W. Newton, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, pp. 3–4, OL 20512798M

References edit

  • Bowler, Peter J. (2003), Evolution: The History of an Idea (3rd ed.), Berkeley: University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-23693-6.
  • Browne, E. Janet (2002), Charles Darwin: vol. 2 The Power of Place, London: Jonathan Cape, ISBN 978-0-7126-6837-8.
  • Darwin, Charles (1859), On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life (1st ed.), London: John Murray.
  • Darwin, Charles (1868), The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication (1st ed.), London: John Murray.
  • Darwin, Charles (1875), The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication (2nd ed.), London: John Murray.
  • Darwin, Francis, ed. (1887), The life and letter of Charles Darwin, including an autobiographical chapter. (3 Volumes), London: John Murray.
  • Darwin, Francis; Seward, A.C., eds. (1903), More Letters of Charles Darwin: A record of his work in a series of hitherto unpublished letters. (2 Volumes), London: John Murray.
  • Olby, Robert (1985), Origins of Mendelism (2nd ed.), Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-62591-1.
  • Stauffer, R.C., ed. (1975), Charles Darwin's Natural Selection; being the second part of his big species book written from 1856 to 1858, London: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-20163-6.

Further reading edit

  • Andersson, Leif; Georges, Michel (2004), "Domestic-animal genomics: deciphering the genetics of complex traits", Nature Reviews Genetics, 5 (3): 202–212, doi:10.1038/nrg1294, PMID 14970822, S2CID 1987372.
  • Desmond, Adrian; Moore, James (1991), Darwin, London: Michael Joseph, ISBN 978-0-7181-3430-3.
  • Purugganan, Michael D.; Fuller, Dorian Q. (2009), "The nature of selection during plant domestication", Nature, 457 (7231): 843–848, Bibcode:2009Natur.457..843P, doi:10.1038/nature07895, PMID 19212403, S2CID 205216444.
  • Rubin, Carl-Johan; Zody, MC; Eriksson, J; Meadows, JR; Sherwood, E; Webster, MT; Jiang, L; Ingman, M; et al. (2010), "Whole-genome resequencing reveals loci under selection during chicken domestication", Nature, 464 (7288): 547–591, Bibcode:2010Natur.464..587R, doi:10.1038/nature08832, PMID 20220755.
  • Stanford, P. Kyle (2006), "Darwin's pangenesis and the problem of unconceived alternatives", British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 57: 121–144, doi:10.1093/bjps/axi158.

External links edit

  • The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication at Project Gutenberg
  • 《The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication》 2 volumes at Internet Archive
  • The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online: The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication, An introduction by R. B. Freeman:
    Bibliography with links to text and images of all editions of The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication, including translations into French, German, Italian, and Polish.
  • Darwin Correspondence Project Home Page, University Library, Cambridge.
  • The text of the second edition of The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication can be downloaded from Project Gutenberg: Volume 1, Volume 2.

variation, animals, plants, under, domestication, book, charles, darwin, that, first, published, january, 1868, title, page, first, edition, authorcharles, darwincountryunited, kingdomlanguageenglishsubjectartificial, selectionpublisherjohn, murraypublication,. The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication is a book by Charles Darwin that was first published in January 1868 The Variation of Animals and Plants Under DomesticationTitle page of the first edition of The Variation of Animals and Plants Under DomesticationAuthorCharles DarwinCountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishSubjectArtificial selectionPublisherJohn MurrayPublication date30 January 1868Media typePrint hardback PagesVol 1 viii 411 43 figsVol 2 viii 486 OCLC960106244A large proportion of the book contains detailed information on the domestication of animals and plants but it also contains in Chapter XXVII a description of Darwin s theory of heredity which he called pangenesis Contents 1 Background 2 Publication 3 Contents 4 Reception 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editSee also Inception of Darwin s theory and Publication of Darwin s theory Darwin had been working for two years writing his big book provisionally titled Natural Selection when on 18 June 1858 he received a parcel from Alfred Wallace who was then living in Borneo 1 It enclosed a twenty pages manuscript describing an evolutionary mechanism that was similar to Darwin s own theory Under pressure to publish his ideas Darwin started work on an abstract summary which was published in November 1859 as On the Origin of Species 2 In the introduction he announced that in a future publication he hoped to give in detail all the facts with references on which my conclusions have been grounded 3 On 9 January 1860 two days after the publication of the second edition of Origin Darwin returned to his original Natural Selection manuscript and began expanding the first two chapters on Variation under Domestication 4 He had a large collection of additional notes and by the middle of June had written drafts of an introduction and two chapters on the domestication of pigeons that would eventually form part of The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication Darwin apparently found writing the book tiresome and writes in his autobiography that he had been tempted to publish on other subjects which at the time interested me more 5 In the following July 1861 he began work on different book the Fertilisation of Orchids which was published in May 1862 Darwin continued to gather data His own practical experiments were confined to plants but he was able to gather information from others by correspondence and even to arrange for some of his correspondents to conduct experiments on his behalf 6 7 In spite of protracted periods of illness he made progress and in March 1865 wrote to his publisher John Murray saying that Of present book I have 7 chapters ready for press amp all others very forward except the last amp concluding one the book as finally published consisted of 28 chapters 8 In the same letter he discussed illustrations for the book Darwin had been mulling for many years on a theory of heredity 9 In May 1865 he sent a manuscript to his friend Thomas Huxley outlining his theory which he called pangenesis and asking whether he should publish it In his accompanying letter Darwin wrote It is a very rash amp crude hypothesis yet it has been a considerable relief to my mind amp I can hang on it a good many groups of facts 10 Huxley pointed out the similarities of pangenesis to the theories of Georges Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon and the Swiss naturalist Charles Bonnet but eventually wrote encouraging Darwin to publish Somebody rummaging among your papers half a century hence will find Pangenesis amp say See this wonderful anticipation of our modern Theories and that stupid ass Huxley prevented his publishing them 11 Publication edit nbsp Rock dove or Columba livia the parent form of all domesticated pigeonsJust before Christmas 1866 all of the manuscript except for the final chapter was sent to the publisher 12 At the beginning January on receiving an estimate of the size of the two volume book from the printers he wrote to his publisher I cannot tell you how sorry I am to hear of the enormous size of my Book 13 He subsequently arranged for some of the more technical sections to be set in smaller type 14 Even at this late stage Darwin was uncertain as to whether to include a chapter on mankind At the end of January he wrote to Murray I feel a full conviction that my Chapter on man will excite attention amp plenty of abuse amp I suppose abuse is as good as praise for selling a Book 15 but he then apparently decided against the idea for a week later in a letter to his close friend Joseph Hooker he explained I began a chapter on Man for which I have long collected materials but it has grown too long amp I think I shall publish separately a very small volume an essay on the origin of mankind 16 This essay would become two books The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex 1871 and The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals 1872 The book had been advertised as early as 1865 with the unwieldy title Domesticated Animals and Cultivated Plants or the Principles of Variation Inheritance Reversion Crossing Interbreeding and Selection under Domestication 17 but Darwin agreed to the shorter The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication suggested by the compositors 14 By May he had arranged for the book to be translated into French Russian and German 14 The French edition would be translated by Jean Jacques Moulinie the German by Julius Victor Carus who had produced the revised version of Origin in 1866 and the Russian edition by Vladimir Onufrievich Kovalevsky the brother of the embryologist Alexander Kovalevsky Darwin received the first proofs on 1 March 1867 18 In the tedious task of making correction he was helped by his 23 year old daughter Henrietta Emma Darwin In the summer while she was away in Cornwall he wrote to commend her work All your remarks criticisms doubts amp corrections are excellent excellent excellent 19 While making corrections Darwin also added new material 19 The proofs were finished on 15 November but there was a further delay while William Dallas prepared an index 14 The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication went on sale on 30 January 1868 thirteen years after Darwin had begun his experiments on breeding and stewing the bones of pigeons He was feeling deflated and concerned about how these large volumes would be received writing if I try to read a few pages I feel fairly nauseated The devil take the whole book 20 In his autobiography he estimated that he had spent 4 year 2 months hard labour on the book 21 Contents edit nbsp English carrier pigeon one of many domesticated varieties deriving from the wild Columba livia or rock doveThe first volume of The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication consists in a lengthy and highly detailed exploration of the mechanisms of variation including the principle of use and disuse the principle of the correlation of parts and the role of the environment in causing variation at work in a number of domestic species Darwin starts with dogs and cats discussing the similarities between wild and domesticated dogs and musing on how the species changed to accommodate man s wishes He attempts to trace a genealogy of contemporary varieties or races back to a few early progenitors These arguments as well as many others use the vast amount of data Darwin gathered about dogs and cats to support his overarching thesis of evolution through natural selection He then goes on to make similar points regarding horses and donkeys sheep goats pigs cattle various types of domesticated fowl a large number of different cultivated plants and most thoroughly pigeons Notably in Chapter XXVII Darwin introduced his provisional hypothesis of pangenesis that he had first outlined to Huxley in 1865 22 He proposed that each part of an organism contains minute invisible particles which he called gemmules These were capable of regenerating the organism so that the leaf of a begonia or a worm chopped into pieces could generate the complete organism and a salamander or crab that lost a limb could regenerate the limb The gemmules were dispersed around the organism and could multiply by division In sexual reproduction they were transmitted from parents to their offspring with the mixing of the gemmules producing offspring with blended characteristics of the parents Gemmules could also remain dormant for several generations before becoming active He also suggested that the environment might affect the gemmules in an organism and thus allowed for the possibility of the Lamarckian inheritance of acquired characteristics 23 24 Darwin believed that his theory could explain a wide range of phenomena All the forms of reproduction graduate into each other and agree in their product for it is impossible to distinguish between organisms produced from buds from self division or from fertilised germs and as we now see that all the forms of reproduction depend on the aggregation of gemmules derived from the whole body we can understand this general agreement It is satisfactory to find that sexual and asexual generation are fundamentally the same Parthenogenesis is no longer wonderful in fact the wonder is that it should not oftener occur 25 In the final pages of the book Darwin directly challenged the argument of divinely guided variation advocated by his friend and supporter the American botanist Asa Gray He used the analogy of an architect using rocks which had broken off naturally and fallen to the foot of a cliff asking Can it be reasonably maintained that the Creator intentionally ordered that certain fragments should assume certain shapes so that the builder might erect his edifice 26 In the same way breeders or natural selection picked those that happened to be useful from variations arising by general laws to improve plants and animals man included Darwin concluded with However much we may wish it we can hardly follow Professor Asa Gray in his belief that variation has been along certain beneficial lines like a stream along definite and useful lines of irrigation 27 Darwin confided to Hooker It is foolish to touch such subjects but there have been so many allusions to what I think about the part which God has played in the formation of organic beings that I thought it shabby to evade the question 16 Reception edit nbsp Spanish fowlDarwin was concerned whether anyone would read the massive volumes and was also anxious to receive feedback from his friends on their views on pangenesis In October 1867 before the book was published he sent copies of the corrected proofs to Asa Gray with the comment The chapter on what I call Pangenesis will be called a mad dream and I shall be pretty well satisfied if you think it a dream worth publishing but at the bottom of my own mind I think it contains a great truth 28 He wrote to Hooker I shall be intensely anxious to hear what you think about Pangenesis 29 and to the German naturalist Fritz Muller The greater part as you will see is not meant to be read but I should very much like to hear what you think of Pangenesis 30 Few of Darwin s colleagues shared his enthusiasm for pangenesis 31 Wallace was initially supportive and Darwin confided to him None of my friends will speak out except to a certain extent Sir H Holland who found it very tough reading but admits that some view closely akin to it will have to be admitted 32 By the end of April Variation had received more than 20 reviews 33 An anonymous review by George Henry Lewes in the Pall Mall Gazette praised its noble calmness undisturbed by the heats of polemical agitation which made the far from calm Darwin laugh and left him cock a hoop 34 In 1875 a second edition was published in which Darwin made a number of corrections and also reworked Chapter XI on Bud variation and Chapter XXVII on Pangenesis The book never became popular and sold only 5000 copies in Darwin s lifetime 35 36 De Vries in 1889 praised the masterly survey of the phenomena to be explained and accepted the idea that the individual hereditary qualities of the whole organism are represented by definite material particles He introduced the notion of intracellula pangenesis which following August Weismann rejected the idea that these particles were thrown off from all the cells of the body He called the particles pangens later abbreviated to gene 37 38 In a similar vein Weismann in his 1893 work Germ Plasm said although Darwin modestly described his theory as a provisional hypothesis his was nevertheless the first comprehensive attempt to explain all the known phenomena of heredity by a common principle I n spite of the fact that a considerable number of these assumptions are untenable a part of the theory still remains which must be accepted as fundamental and correct in principle at any rate not only now but for all time to come presupposing the existence of material particles in the germ which possess the properties of the living being I must honestly confess to having mentally resisted this fundamental point of the Darwinian doctrine for a long time 39 See also editInception of Darwin s theory Publication of Darwin s theory Darwin from Orchids to Variation List of works by Charles Darwin Domestication syndromeNotes edit Darwin 1887 pp 84 85 Vol 1 Stauffer 1975 pp 1 14 Darwin 1859 p 2 Charles Darwin s journal for 1860 Darwin Online Darwin 1887 p 90 Vol 1 Browne 2002 pp 201 211 Introduction to Volume 12 1864 Darwin Correspondence Project archived from the original on 30 April 2008 Letter 4801 Darwin C R to Murray John b 31 Mar 1865 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 5612 Darwin C R to Lyell Charles 22 Aug 1867 Darwin Correspondence Project Introduction to Volume 13 1865 Darwin Correspondence Project archived from the original on 27 February 2008 Letter 4837 Darwin C R to Huxley T H 27 May 1865 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 4875 Huxley T H to Darwin C R 16 July 1865 Darwin Correspondence Project Charles Darwin s journal for 1866 Darwin Online Letter 5346 Darwin C R to Murray John b 3 Jan 1867 Darwin Correspondence Project a b c d Introduction to Volume 15 1867 Darwin Correspondence Project archived from the original on 9 June 2008 Letter 5384 Darwin C R to Murray John b 31 Jan 1867 Darwin Correspondence Project a b Letter 5395 Darwin C R to Hooker J D 8 Feb 1867 Darwin Correspondence Project See Footnote 2 in Letter 4801 Darwin C R to Murray John b 31 Mar 1865 Darwin Correspondence Project Charles Darwin s journal for 1867 Darwin Online a b Letter 5585 Darwin C R to Darwin H E 26 July 1867 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 5835 Darwin C R to Hooker J D 3 Feb 1868 Darwin Correspondence Project Darwin 1887 p 75 Vol 3 Darwin 1887 pp 90 93 Vol 1 For a discussion of how Darwin arrived at his hypothesis see Olby 1985 pp 84 85 Browne 2002 pp 282 284 Bowler 2003 pp 199 200 Darwin 1868 p 383 Darwin 1868 p 431 Vol 2 Browne 2002 p 293 Darwin 1868 p 432 Vol 2 Letter 5649 Darwin C R to Gray Asa 16 Oct 1867 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 5680 Darwin C R to Hooker J D 17 Nov 1867 Darwin Correspondence Project Letter 5816 Darwin C R to Muller J F T 30 Jan 1868 Darwin Correspondence Project Darwin 1887 p 75 Vol 3 Browne 2002 p 288 Letter 5940 Darwin C R to Wallace A R 27 Feb 1868 Darwin Correspondence Project Darwin amp Seward 1903 p 301 Vol 1 Introduction to Volume 16 1868 Darwin Correspondence Project Darwin 1887 p 76 Vol 3 Letter 5856 Darwin C R to Hooker J D 10 Feb 1868 Darwin Correspondence Project Darwin 1875 Browne 2002 p 287 De Vries Hugo 1910 German language edition published in 1889 Intracellular Pangenesis trans Cager C Stuart Boston Open Court pp 3 5 OL 7215909M Written as pangene in the German text De Vries Hugo 1889 Intracellulare Pangenesis in German Jena von Guetav Fischer p 6 OL 7227630M Weismann August 1893 The Germ Plasm A Theory of Heredity trans Parker W Newton New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 3 4 OL 20512798MReferences editBowler Peter J 2003 Evolution The History of an Idea 3rd ed Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 23693 6 Browne E Janet 2002 Charles Darwin vol 2 The Power of Place London Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 0 7126 6837 8 Darwin Charles 1859 On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life 1st ed London John Murray Darwin Charles 1868 The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication 1st ed London John Murray Darwin Charles 1875 The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication 2nd ed London John Murray Darwin Francis ed 1887 The life and letter of Charles Darwin including an autobiographical chapter 3 Volumes London John Murray Darwin Francis Seward A C eds 1903 More Letters of Charles Darwin A record of his work in a series of hitherto unpublished letters 2 Volumes London John Murray Olby Robert 1985 Origins of Mendelism 2nd ed Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 62591 1 Stauffer R C ed 1975 Charles Darwin s Natural Selection being the second part of his big species book written from 1856 to 1858 London Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20163 6 Further reading editAndersson Leif Georges Michel 2004 Domestic animal genomics deciphering the genetics of complex traits Nature Reviews Genetics 5 3 202 212 doi 10 1038 nrg1294 PMID 14970822 S2CID 1987372 Desmond Adrian Moore James 1991 Darwin London Michael Joseph ISBN 978 0 7181 3430 3 Purugganan Michael D Fuller Dorian Q 2009 The nature of selection during plant domestication Nature 457 7231 843 848 Bibcode 2009Natur 457 843P doi 10 1038 nature07895 PMID 19212403 S2CID 205216444 Rubin Carl Johan Zody MC Eriksson J Meadows JR Sherwood E Webster MT Jiang L Ingman M et al 2010 Whole genome resequencing reveals loci under selection during chicken domestication Nature 464 7288 547 591 Bibcode 2010Natur 464 587R doi 10 1038 nature08832 PMID 20220755 Stanford P Kyle 2006 Darwin s pangenesis and the problem of unconceived alternatives British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 57 121 144 doi 10 1093 bjps axi158 External links editThe Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication at Project Gutenberg The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication 2 volumes at Internet Archive nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication The Complete Works of Charles Darwin Online The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication An introduction by R B Freeman Bibliography with links to text and images of all editions of The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication including translations into French German Italian and Polish Darwin Correspondence Project Home Page University Library Cambridge The text of the second edition of The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication can be downloaded from Project Gutenberg Volume 1 Volume 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication 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