came together in the
population genetics of the early 20th century to form the so-called
modern synthesis, including
genetic variation,
natural selection, and particulate (
Mendelian) inheritance. This was at the time called neo-Darwinism.
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection, as published in 1859, provided a selection mechanism for evolution, but not a trait transfer mechanism.
Lamarckism was still a very popular candidate for this.
August Weismann and
Alfred Russel Wallace rejected the Lamarckian idea of
inheritance of acquired characteristics that Darwin had accepted and later expanded upon in
his writings on heredity. The basis for the complete rejection of Lamarckism was Weismann's
germ plasm theory. Weismann realised that the cells that produce the germ plasm, or
gametes (such as
sperm and
eggs in
animals), separate from the
somatic cells that go on to make other body tissues at an early stage in development. Since he could see no obvious means of communication between the two, he asserted that the inheritance of acquired characteristics was therefore impossible, a conclusion now known as the
Weismann barrier. It is, however, usually
George Romanes who is credited with the first use of the word in a scientific context. Romanes used the term to describe the combination of
natural selection and Weismann's germ plasm theory that evolution occurs solely through natural selection, and not by the inheritance of acquired characteristics resulting from use or disuse, thus using the word to mean "Darwinism without Lamarckism." Following the development, from about 1918 to 1947, of the
modern synthesis of
evolutionary biology, the term neo-Darwinian started to be used to refer to that contemporary evolutionary theory. ==Current meaning==