Yule's analysis of Mendelism and continuous variation, 1902 The undermining of mutationism began almost at once, in 1902, as the statistician
Udny Yule analysed Mendel's theory and showed that given full dominance of one allele over another, a 3:1 ratio of alleles would be sustained indefinitely. This meant that the recessive allele could remain in the population with no need to invoke mutation. He also showed that given multiple factors, Mendel's theory enabled continuous variation, as indeed Mendel had suggested, removing the central plank of the mutationist theory, and criticised Bateson's confrontational approach. However, the "excellent" paper did not prevent the
Mendelians and the biometricians from falling out.
Nilsson-Ehle's experiments on Mendelian inheritance and continuous variation, 1908 The Swedish geneticist
H. Nilsson-Ehle demonstrated in 1908, in a paper published in German in a Swedish journal,
Einige Ergebnisse von Kreuzungen bei Hafer und Weizen (Observations on Crosses in Oats and Wheat), that continuous variation could readily be produced by multiple Mendelian genes. He found numerous Mendelian 3:1 ratios, implying a dominant and a recessive allele, in
oats and
wheat; a 15:1 ratio for a cross of oat varieties with black and white
glumes respectively, implying two pairs of alleles (two Mendelian factors); and that crossing a red-grained Swedish velvet wheat with a white one gave in the third (F3) generation the complex signature of ratios expected of three factors at once, with 37 grains giving only red offspring, 8 giving 63:1 in their offspring, 12 giving 15:1, and 6 giving 3:1. There weren't any grains giving all white, but as he had only expected 1 of those in his sample, 0 was not an unlikely outcome. Genes could clearly combine in almost infinite combinations: ten of his factors allowed for almost 60,000 different forms, with no need to suppose that any new mutations were involved. The results implied that natural selection would work on Mendelian genes, helping to bring about the unification of Darwinian evolution and genetics. Similar work in America by
Edward East on
maize in 1910 showed the same thing for biologists without access to Nilsson-Ehle's work. On the same theme, the mathematician
Ronald Fisher published "
The Correlation Between Relatives on the Supposition of Mendelian Inheritance" in 1918, again showing that continuous variation could readily be produced by multiple Mendelian genes. It showed, too, that Mendelian inheritance had no essential link with mutationism: Fisher stressed that small variations (per gene) would be sufficient for natural selection to drive evolution.
Castle's selection experiments on hooded rats, 1911 Starting in 1906,
William Castle carried out a long study of the effect of selection on coat colour in
rats. The
piebald or hooded pattern was recessive to the grey
wild type. He crossed hooded rats with the black-backed Irish type, and then back-crossed the offspring with pure hooded rats. The dark stripe on the back was bigger. He then tried selecting different groups for bigger or smaller stripes for 5 generations, and found that it was possible to change the characteristics way beyond the initial range of variation. This effectively refuted de Vries's claim that continuous variation could not be inherited permanently, requiring new mutations. By 1911 Castle noted that the results could be explained by Darwinian selection on heritable variation of Mendelian genes.
Morgan's small Mendelian genes in Drosophila, 1912 's work on
Drosophila melanogaster found many small Mendelian factors for natural selection to work on. By 1912, after years of work on the genetics of
Drosophila fruit flies,
Thomas Hunt Morgan showed that these animals had many small Mendelian factors on which Darwinian evolution could work as if variation was fully continuous. The way was open for geneticists to conclude that Mendelism supported Darwinism.
Muller's balanced lethal explanation of Oenothera "mutations", 1918 De Vries's mutationism was dealt a serious if not fatal blow in 1918 by the American geneticist
Hermann Joseph Muller. He compared the behaviour of balanced lethals in
Drosophila with De Vries's supposed mutations in
Oenothera, showing that they could work the same way. No actual mutations were involved, but infrequent
chromosome crossovers accounted for the sudden appearance of traits which had been present in the genes all along.
Fisher's explanation of polymorphism, 1927 In 1927, Fisher explicitly attacked Punnett's 1915 theory of discontinuous evolution of mimicry. Fisher argued that selection acting on genes making small modifications to the butterfly's
phenotype (its appearance) would allow the multiple forms of a polymorphism to be established. == Later mutationist theories ==