Non-human animals . Vestigial characters are present throughout the
animal kingdom, and an almost endless list could be given. Darwin said that "it would be impossible to name one of the higher animals in which some part or other is not in a rudimentary condition." The eyes of certain
cavefish and
salamanders are vestigial, as they no longer allow the organism to see, and are remnants of their ancestors' functional eyes. Animals that reproduce without sex (via
asexual reproduction) generally lose their sexual traits, such as the ability to locate/recognize the opposite sex and copulation behavior.
Boas and
pythons have vestigial pelvis remnants, which are externally visible as two small
pelvic spurs on each side of the cloaca. These spurs are sometimes used in copulation, but are not essential, as no colubrid snake (the vast majority of species) possesses these remnants. Furthermore, in most snakes, the left lung is greatly reduced or absent.
Amphisbaenians, which independently evolved limblessness, also retain vestiges of the pelvis as well as the pectoral girdle, and have lost their right lung. in various genera of
protomicrocotylids. Accessory
sclerites (black) are present in normal clamps but absent in simplified clamps.
Lethacotyle (right) has no clamp at all. A case of vestigial organs was described in
polyopisthocotylean
Monogeneans (
parasitic flatworms). These parasites usually have a posterior attachment organ with several
clamps, which are sclerotised organs attaching the worm to the gill of the
host fish. These clamps are extremely important for the survival of the parasite. In the family
Protomicrocotylidae, species have either normal clamps, simplified clamps, or no clamps at all (in the genus
Lethacotyle). After a comparative study of the relative surface of clamps in more than 100
Monogeneans, this has been interpreted as an evolutionary sequence leading to the loss of clamps. Coincidentally, other attachment structures (lateral flaps, transverse striations) have evolved in protomicrocotylids. Therefore,
clamps in
protomicrocotylids were considered vestigial organs. In the foregoing examples the vestigiality is generally the (sometimes incidental) result of
adaptive evolution. However, there are many examples of vestigiality as the product of drastic
mutation, and such vestigiality is usually harmful or counter-adaptive. One of the earliest documented examples was that of vestigial wings in
Drosophila. Many examples in many other contexts have emerged since.
Humans Human vestigiality is related to
human evolution, and includes a variety of characters occurring in the
human species. Many examples of these are vestigial in other
primates and related animals, whereas other examples are still highly developed. The human
caecum is vestigial, as often is the case in
omnivores, being reduced to a single chamber receiving the content of the
ileum into the
colon. The ancestral caecum would have been a large, blind diverticulum in which resistant plant material such as
cellulose would have been fermented in preparation for absorption in the colon. or tailbone, though a vestige of the tail of some primate ancestors, is functional as an anchor for certain pelvic muscles including: the levator ani muscle and the largest gluteal muscle, the gluteus maximus. Other structures that are vestigial include the
plica semilunaris on the inside corner of the
eye (a remnant of the
nictitating membrane); and (as seen at right)
muscles in the
ear. Other organic structures (such as the
occipitofrontalis muscle) have lost their original functions (to keep the head from falling) but are still useful for other purposes (facial expression). Humans also bear some vestigial behaviors and reflexes. The formation of
goose bumps in humans under
stress is a vestigial
reflex; its function in human ancestors was to raise the body's hair, making the ancestor appear larger and scaring off predators. The
arrector pili (muscle that connects the hair follicle to connective tissue) contracts and creates goosebumps on skin. There are also vestigial molecular structures in humans, which are no longer in use but may indicate common ancestry with other species. One example of this is a gene that is functional in most other mammals and which produces
L-gulonolactone oxidase, an
enzyme that can make
vitamin C. A documented mutation deactivated the gene in an ancestor of the modern infraorder of
monkeys, and apes, and it now remains in their
genomes, including the
human genome, as a vestigial sequence called a
pseudogene. The shift in human diet towards soft and processed food over time caused a reduction in the number of powerful grinding teeth, especially the
third molars (also known as wisdom teeth), which are highly prone to
impaction.
Plants and fungi Plants also have vestigial parts, including functionless
stipules and
carpels, leaf reduction of
Equisetum,
paraphyses of
Fungi. Well known examples are the reductions in floral display, leading to smaller and/or paler flowers, in plants that reproduce without
outcrossing, for example via
selfing or obligate clonal reproduction.
Objects . Many objects in daily use contain vestigial structures. While not the result of
natural selection through random mutation, much of the process is the same. Product design, like evolution, is iterative; it builds on features and processes that already exist, with limited resources available to make tweaks. To spend resources on completely weeding out a form that serves no purpose (if at the same time it is not an obstruction either) is not economically astute. These vestigial structures differ from the concept of
skeuomorphism in that a skeuomorph is a design feature that has been specifically implemented as a reference to the past, enabling users to acclimatise quicker. A vestigial feature does not exist intentionally, or even usefully. For example,
men's business suits often contain a row of buttons at the bottom of the sleeve. These used to serve a purpose, allowing the sleeve to be split and rolled up. The feature has been lost entirely, though most suits still give the impression that it is possible, complete with fake button holes. There is also an example of
exaptation to be found in the business suit: it was previously possible to button a jacket up all the way to the top. As it became the fashion to fold the
lapel over, the top half of buttons and their accompanying buttonholes disappeared, save for a single hole at the top; it has since found a new use as a place to fasten pins, badges, or
boutonnières. As a final example, soldiers in ceremonial or parade uniform can sometimes be seen wearing a
gorget: a small decorative piece of metal suspended around the neck with a chain. The gorget serves no protection to the wearer, yet there exists an unbroken lineage from the gorget to the full
suits of armour of the middle ages. With the introduction of gunpowder weapons, armour increasingly lost its usefulness on the battlefield. At the same time, military men were keen to retain the status it provided them. The result: a breastplate that "shrank" away over time, but never disappeared completely. ==See also==