Vaccination-exemption law makes its way through the California legislature

June 26, 2015 • 2:30 pm

There’s more good news today (actually, from yesterday): according to multiple sources, including the Los Angeles Times, the California Assembly has approved a tough pro-vaccination law, one that eliminates all religious and philosophical exemptions from immunization for kids who want to attend public school. The state senate has passed its own version, but they’re similar and the differences are expected to be resolved before the bill goes to the governor for his signature. Unfortunately, that governor is Jerry Brown.

As you may know, 48 of our 50 US states allow religious exemptions from vaccinations (the exceptions are, surprisingly, West Virginia and Mississippi), while 20 allow “philosophical” or “personal belief exemption. (That shows that religious convictions are regarded as more serious than philosophical ones.) Here’s a map of states with exemptions:ExImmunMap15The new California bill also prohibits both philosophical and religious exemptions.

As the L. A. Times reports:

The measure, among the most controversial taken up by the Legislature this year, would require more children who enter day care and school to be vaccinated against diseases including measles and whooping cough.

Those with medical conditions such as allergies and immune-system deficiencies, confirmed by a physician, would be excused from immunization. And parents could still decline to vaccinate children who attend private home-based schools or public independent studies off campus.

It is unclear whether Gov. Jerry Brown will sign the measure, which grew out of concern about low vaccination rates in some communities and an outbreak of measles at Disneyland that ultimately infected more than 150 people.

“The governor believes that vaccinations are profoundly important and a major public health benefit, and any bill that reaches his desk will be closely considered,” Evan Westrup, the governor’s spokesman, said Thursday.

Well, Governor Moonbeam damn well better sign the law; there’s no excuse for him vetoing it. As I wrote earlier this month in the month in The New Republic, there’s simply no valid excuse—save medical conditions like immunodeficiency—to allow unvaccinated children to mingle with others in public schools. It reduces herd immunity and is endangers public health. We’ve already seen epidemics produced by religious exemptions to vaccination. But in this case, fact must trump faith faith: public safety overrides religion, just as if religious people sought exemptions from having to possess a license to drive a car.

Nevertheless, it was a tough battle, waged largely against those who are ignorant about the safety of vaccinations:

Sen. Richard Pan (D-Sacramento), a pediatrician and an author of the bill, has received death threats. And opponents of the proposal have filed papers with the state to initiate the process of recalling Pan and Sen. Bill Monning (D-Carmel), a vocal supporter, from office.

Hundreds of parents besieged the Capitol during a series of legislative hearings to oppose the bill in the belief that vaccines are unsafe, that the proposal would violate their privacy rights and that they alone — not the state — should choose whether to vaccinate their children.

This is the result when faith is allowed to displace science:

Dr. Catherine Sonquist Forest, medical director of the Stanford Health Care clinic in Los Altos, said immunizing more people is essential to protect babies too young to receive vaccines.

“This isn’t a question of personal choice,” Forest said. “This is an obligation to society.”

Forest is caring for a 4-year-old boy dying of a rare complication of measles that infected his brain. He was infected when he was 5 months old and too young to be vaccinated.

One child dead because of superstition is one too many.

Important note to readers and contributors

June 26, 2015 • 1:00 pm

If you’ve been in Alma Ata or something, you may not know that I’m going on the big Road Trip tomorrow, returning about August 8. Along the way I hope to see some of you—as well as your cats. Posting will be light, but we hope to keep things puttering away at some level. In the meantime, two requests for readers.

1. If you have something to email me, Jerry, please do so only once every ten days or so.  I will be out of Internet contact a lot of the time, and won’t be able to deal with lots of reader emails. If you have wildlife photos, please put them in an email with the header “Readers’ wildlife photos.”

2.  If you want to contribute something to the website beyond that, Grania will have the keys and can take suggestions. You can reach her on Twitter @ygern, or leave her a note in the comments. She can then pull your email from the comment information (the non-public email you put down when posting a comment) and contact you directly.

If I die in a car crash (I haz premonitions), it’s been a good run, and hoist a good glass in my memory. kthxbai.

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A video on (the absence of) free will

June 26, 2015 • 11:45 am

Reader Matthew sent me this brand-new Cracked video with the note:

It’s a pretty funny take-down of common arguments for free will, mostly of the compatibilist variety. None of this will be new to you, but the arguments are snappy and cogent. I also found some of their analogies to be quite clever.
Cracked, in case you’re not familiar, began as a MAD Magazine knock-off, but has since developed a significant internet presence.

Cameroon lake cichlids probably did not speciate sympatrically: Part 2

June 26, 2015 • 10:45 am

Yesterday I gave the background necessary for understanding a new paper in Evolution by Christopher H. Martin et al. (reference and link below). Today I’ll briefly describe the paper’s findings—findings that cast doubt on one of our premier examples of sympatric speciation.

That example was the existence of assemblages of cichlid fish in small volcanic crater lakes in Cameroon. Because genetic evidence by Schliewen et al. (1994) showed that each assemblage was monophyletic, that is, appeared to descend from a single common ancestral species that invaded the crater lakes some time ago (between 1 and 2.5 myr for Lake Barombi Mbo and 100,000 to 2.5 myr for Lake Bermin), this gave evidence that the formation of 11 species in Barombi Mbo and 9 in Bermin had occurred sympatrically—without geographic isolation of populations.

Read yesterday’s post for background. Here are the two radiations at issue, showing the location of the crater lakes.

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The authors re-did the genetic analysis of the two radiations shown above (and others from different lakes as well), producing more than 350 million DNA sequences. (This is the level of analysis that new techniques permit us.) From this they then re-did the phylogenetic analysis. Here’s what they found.

  • The “monophyly” (descent from a common ancestor) of the two radiations shown above is weaker than previously thought. The authors conclude that this monophyly, which is crucial evidence for sympatric speciation, is not “strongly supported.”
  • Further, there appears to have been substantial introgression (movement of genes) between not only some of the species in each of the two radiations, but also between the species in the lake and different “outgroup” species in rivers outside the lakes. This suggests that there have been multiple invasions of the lakes by ancestors of the crater-lake fish, and this again militates against a single common ancestor forming multiple species in the lake.

How did Martin et al. detect this introgression? By looking at the asymmetry of genetic similarity between species within the radiations, and also between those species and others outside the lake. As they explain:

Information about the directionality of introgression comes from the asymmetries in the relationships among populations given the tree. For example, if we imagine a tree ((A,B)(C,D)) with subsequent introgression from B into C, population C would show unusually high covariance with A, but B would not with D.

In other words, if the tree shows two sister pairs of species (species A closely related to B, and species C closely related to D, and the (A + B) group more distantly related to the (C + D) group, gene movement between B and C, which reside in different groups, could be detected when some genes in C could also be found in A. This shows a resemblance between species of different groups not seen in the species B and D, also residing in different groups. This pattern could only occur if there was movement of genes between species in different groups, either before or during speciation.

I won’t go into the gory details, and, truth be told, the complete details of the methodology elude me, but the results are clear: the species in the lakes are not convincingly monophyletic, and also exchanged genes not only with each other, but with some species outside the lake.

How could this happen? In several ways, all of which violate the notion that speciation (the generation of largely reproductively isolated entities within the lake after an invasion by a single ancestor) occurred with free gene flow. First, there could be multiple invasions of the crater by fish from a single lineage, with that lineage changing genetically between invasions.  That could mean that some reproductive isolation could have evolved between the invasions, and that could promote speciation between the fish in the lake.

That reproductive isolation wouldn’t be complete, and the incipient species could exchange genes but gradually become full species due to the process of reinforcement. In this process, species that already have evolved some reproductive isolation—in the from of hybrid problems like hybrid sterility or inviability—then experience natural selection for increased sexual isolation, because those individuals in each incipient species that mated with their own kind would leave more genes than those which mate with the other kind. This could eventually lead to reproductive isolation, but also to the misleading appearance of monophyly among species due to gene exchange. This is not sympatric speciation because a period of geographic isolation would be necessary to evolve the “reproductive isolation” genes.

An alternative scenario involves multiple colonizations of the lake by either different ancestral species or, as above, different segments of a single ancestral lineage at different times. The multiple colonists could then form a hybrid swarm, with copious mixing of genes, and then that swarm could sort itself out into different species in the crater lake. Again, some allopatry is required.

In both cases, the gene exchange that occurred while new species were forming in the lake gives them the appearance of all descending from a single ancestor that invaded only once, but in reality the speciation involved an allopatric (geographically isolated) phase.

Whatever happened, the signal of gene exchange is clear, and pretty much eliminates these two crater-lake radiations as a result of purely sympatric speciation. (I hasten to add that some of the genetic divergence between species surely evolved within the crater, but the reproductive isolation also required an allopatric phase for at least part of the process.)

The authors note too that the crater lakes do have some different ecological niches, and, if fish tend to mate where they live, that would facilitate speciation within a small area, but an area in which there is still some spatial isolation between the speciating populations. Traits in animals or plants that produce an automatic association between location and time of mating are called “magic traits” because they have a double effect. For example, a single pregnant female fish might like to hang around at the bottom of the crater lake, and if its offspring are produced there, and they show a tendency to stay there, as well as mating with others that are nearby, this would lead to a kind of geographic isolation based on restriction of gene flow between fish that like to live in other parts of the lake. All that is required is that fish tend to mate and produce offspring in certain areas, and offspring mate with those nearby. This would eventually yield selection to adapt to your habitat, and the appearance of reproductive isolation as a byproduct. In support of this, the authors note that many of the species in the two radiations above are “habitat specialists”, found most often in one particular part of the lake.

So the existence of “magic traits” can facilitate sympatric speciation, but that’s not sympatric speciation in its strictest sense, which involves the generation of new species without any physical separation. The authors conclude:

Available evidence suggests that all crater lake cichlid radiations speciated with the help of double invasions (Schliewen et al. 2006; Geiger et al. 2013) or remain stalled as incipient species complexes (Elmer et al. 2010b; Martin 2012, 2013). To our knowledge, all compelling examples of sympatric speciation besides crater lake cichlid radiations involve some form of au- tomatic linkage between ecological divergence and mating time or location, known as “automatic magic traits” (see review in Servedio et al. 2011).

What are those compelling examples of sympatric speciation beyond the crater lake cichlids? One of them are the two sister species of palm trees that diverged on Lord Howe Island. (See my review of this situation in my News and Views “Speciation in a small space“; reference below).  In that case, a few palms from a colonizing species found themselves in dry soil, which automatically makes them flower earlier than plants on wetter soil (in dry soil you must to get your seeds out ASAP because soil drying over time can reduce your ability to reproduce). Thus those palms, producing pollen and ovules at the same time, were more likely to mate with each other than with their conspecific palms on wetter soils that flowered later. This could eventually produce differential adaptive evolution and reproductive isolation. Living on dry soils is one example of a magic trait in which habitat and reproduction are automatically associated.

Martin et al. cite three other examples of sympatric speciation that they consider convincing. One is the case of two groups of pea aphids that live on alfalfa and tomato in the U.S., and are said to have speciated in sympatry (tomato fields often lie next to alfalfa ones). But Allen Orr and I showed in Speciation that this is not a good case of sympatric speciation, since the divergence probably occurred in Europe, where the aphids live on multiple plants, and was probably followed by double colonization of the U.S.

The other two cases involve mole rats and spiny mice in Evolution Canyon, a canyon in Israel with ecologically distinct sides. I haven’t yet read those papers, so I can’t comment on them. But what’s clear is that, after the Martin et al. paper, perhaps the most convincing example of speciation we had is no longer so convincing.

What remains? The Lord Howe plants are a good case of speciation on a very small island, but need further investigation to see if “magic traits” could have been involved. Besides those plants, there are a few other cases (other fish and fig wasps) we mentioned in Speciation, but the evidence is not very strong.  All the data to date suggest that while sympatric speciation with free gene flow is a theoretical possibility, there is little evidence for it occurring in nature. There are certainly some cases (everything possible happens at least once in evolution), and of course getting good evidence for those cases would be hard. What we can say, though, is that there are not enough data to support the frequent assertion that sympatric speciation is common.
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Coyne, J. A. Speciation in a small space. Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. USA 108:12975-12976.

Martin, C. H., et al. (2015). Complex histories of repeated gene flow in Cameroon crater lake cichlids cast doubt on one of the clearest examples of sympatric speciation. Evolution 69(6): 1406-1422.

Schliewen, U. K., et al. (1994). Sympatric speciation suggested by monophyly of crater lake cichlidsNature 368: 629-632.

U. S. Supreme Court rules that same-sex marriage is a constitutional right

June 26, 2015 • 9:44 am

At last, though I predicted the vote would be 6-3 instead of the actual 5-4. Gay marriage is, by that close vote, the law of the land, and it’s about damn time! From the New York Times live feed (lots more information at that site):

Readers’ wildlife photos

June 26, 2015 • 8:15 am

This may be the last dollop of photos for a while, depending on how much time I have on the road. But today we have a great series from Bruce Lyon, continuing his story of the Northern Harrier nest I posted about several weeks ago. Here are his pictures and notes; the photos are stunning, and be sure to read the text:

I have been following nesting Northern Harriers (Circus cyaneus) north of Santa Cruz in California. This batch of photos is a follow up to photos and descriptions Jerry posted on June 7.

The male provided much of the family food, particularly during incubation and the early chick stage. Male harriers almost never go to the nest but transfer prey items to the female in the air. The next two photos show a prey transfer. The female (brown bird) chased the male (gray bird), who has a mouse (you can see it under his fanned tail). In prey transfers, the male drops the prey item when the female is close enough, and she then quickly snatches the prey item. In the particular transfer shown below, the male seemed to drop the mouse a bit early and the female had to go into a nose dive to get the mouse (second photo). It took me a lot of attempts to finally get a decent set of images of transfers because it is difficult to predict where the transfer will occur and they are not always very close. The two photos of the prey transfer were taken with my Canon 500mm F4 lens and are heavily cropped.

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Female returns to the nest with the mouse. I was able to watch the female calmly coming and going to the nest simply by throwing some camo netting over myself and camera. As far as both the male and female were concerned, I disappeared once the camo netting was over me:

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Female coming in to the nest with a lizard (a Western Fence Lizard [Sceloporus occentalis] I believe):

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The harriers often had what I interpret as a ritualized copulation interaction. Often when the male returned to the nest area and the female was not on the nest but perched on a bush, he would land on her back for a second, crouch down and then take off. I saw this happen about a dozen times and watched carefully and never saw anything resembling a real copulation. I have no idea whether this serves any function, but in the old days this behavior have been interpreted in context of ‘maintaining the pairbond’. The next two photos show one of these pseudo-copulations:

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The harrier nest had a fairly high rate of ‘brood reduction’ (chick death). Of the five chicks that hatched, only two survived. Often extreme brood reduction like this is associated with asynchronous hatching, where different eggs hatch on different days. David Lack, the influential English ornithologist, proposed that brood reduction is a mechanism that allows birds to adjust their family size to an unpredictable food supply (they have to choose the number of eggs to lay before they know precisely how much food will be available for the kids). He also suggested that asynchronous hatching provides the parents an efficient mechanism to trim the brood size to match food supply because the smaller, later-hatched chicks are the first to go if there is not enough food for all. The harriers seem to fit this pattern—two chicks hatched on the first day, two chicks hatched on the second day and the last chick hatched later (presumably the next day but I did not check the nest for a couple of days). Since the chicks were not tagged I don’t know which chicks perished but there was a very clear size hierarchy early on and I am pretty sure that the two survivors were the chicks that hatched on the first day. It is well known that female harriers, who do the actual chick feeding at the nest, do not preferentially feed the smallest chicks—the largest chicks would have a competitive advantage in grabbing food due to their larger size. Here is the first day of hatching:

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When I next, checked the nest a week after hatch there were four chicks left. The chick on the right had recently swallowed a large mouse intact and the tip of the mouse’s tail is sticking out the chick’s beak:

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When I next checked the nest, three weeks after the first eggs hatched, there were only two chicks left:

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One month after hatch the chicks were developing the gorgeous rufous coloration of juvenile harriers:

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Almost 50 days after hatching the two survivors are full grown and could fly very well:

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After the chicks fledged I made a discovery that could explain the extreme brood reduction, and it also provides a an example of an idea I have been thinking about for awhile. I observed the male fly by the nesting area with a mouse. The female flew up to him and I expected a prey transfer, but it did not happen. Instead, the male kept flying. The photo below, of the male with a pocket gopher, illustrates what I saw but is not the actual event. Roughly a mile further south a second female flew up and got the prey item from the male—he had a second family!  I eventually found the second nest and it contained four large chicks ready to fledge. This nest was about three weeks behind the first one but since it had double the family size I suspect the male was bring most of his prey items to this nest.
Polygyny, where one male has several mates, is fairly common in harriers and individual males can have ‘harems’ of 2 to 5 females. Back to the issue of brood reduction, I now wonder if the first female laid a clutch size that would have been ideal had her mate invested only in her nest. David Lack proposed brood reduction to deal with ecological uncertainty but I have been wondering for some time whether social uncertainty—specifically whether feeding by the male is predictably or not—might play a role in some species. Then the harriers provided a possible example. Natural history at its best!
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A couple of last photos—the female landing on a bush, backlit, from two different angles:
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“Happy”

June 26, 2015 • 7:30 am

Happy“, written and performed by Pharrell Williams, was a huge hit all over the world, reaching #1 in many lands, including the US and the UK. (The YouTube video has over 681 million views!) Yet for some reason I completely missed it, probably because, as a curmudgeon, I no longer listen to music radio. I found the song last night and was amazed at how good it was. Although it’s considered “black music,” it’s neither rap nor soul, but it’s much closer to Motown (e.g., “My Girl”) than to rap.

Williams also co-wrote the infamous but wildly successful “Blurred Lines“, and was sued for plagiarizing Marvin Gaye’s “Got to Give It Up” (note the resemblance). Nevertheless, he seems to be an enormous talent: on “Happy” he not only wrote the song and sang it, but also played keyboard, drums, and bass. And the music video is really nice, with a whole array of boogying people.

Williams’s falsetto, demonstrated in the chorus at 0:49, 1:37, 2:25, 2:49, 3:25, and 3:49, reminds me a lot of Smokey Robinson when he was with the Miracles. Anyway, this is a good start to the weekend:

Friday: Hili dialogue (and lagniappe)

June 26, 2015 • 5:05 am

And so we’ve reached the end of another week. Tomorrow I leave for the Big Road Trip, and posting will be light for six weeks or so.. The co-writers on this site will try to pick up some slack, we will still have Hili dialogues every day and perhaps some discussion threads, and of course there will be Caturday Felids. But bear with me until I return around August 8. Talk among yourselves, read H is for Hawk, and so on.  Meanwhile in Dobrzyn, Hili is thinking Deep Thoughts.  She is also sitting very cutely.

Hili: It’s a good place to think, under this apple tree.
A: And what are you thinking about?
Hili: Whether that salmon paste is still in the fridge.

P1020984 In Polish:

Hili: Pod tą jabłonką dobrze się myśli.
Ja: A o czym myślisz?
Hili: Czy w lodówce jest jeszcze ta pasta z łososiem?

As lagniappe, we have a VERY RARE photo: Andrzej put on a suit yesterday morning, apparel he hates to wear. He does this only once a year to go to the local school and award prizes to the children for achievement. At my request, Malgorzata snapped a photo of him in the suit, holding the Furry Princess of Poland. This could easily be a Hili Dialogue, so I urge readers to supply their own dialogue.  And be sure to tell Andrzej how spiffy he looks!

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