Mockingbirds, not finches, set Darwin on the road to evolution. - New exhibition at the Natural History museum08/11/2008 08:19:10Darwin ExhibitionMore about the Natural History Museum exhibition about Darwin here. For the past several decades, the Galapagos finches have been widely regarded as Darwin's inspiration. However, historians familiar with Darwin's notes know the Galapagos mockingbirds were the true catalyst for Darwin's ideas on transmutation - the change of one species into another. Two of Darwin's mockingbirds, perhaps the most important specimens he ever collected, will go on display for the first time ever in the Darwin exhibition, which opens to the public on Friday 14 November at the Natural History Museum in London. These Floreana and San Cristobal mockingbirds are the individuals from which the two species, both now endangered in the wild, were first described. Towards the end of his five-year voyage on the Beagle, Darwin worked hard collecting specimens in the Galapagos, starting on San Cristobal Island. Among the birds he observed and collected was a mockingbird, which he immediately recognised as similar to ones he had already collected in South America. On Floreana, the next Galapagos island visited by the Beagle, Darwin noticed and collected a different mockingbird. He wasn't expecting to see much variety in one bird species on the separate islands, but to his surprise, the mockingbirds on Floreana were all noticeably and consistently different from those on San Cristobal. It was while he was on Floreana that the interim governor told him the giant tortoises, too, were recognizably different on each island. After that, Darwin collected mockingbirds from the other two islands he visited and was careful to note from which island each bird came (something he didn't do for the finches). The differences were not between single specimens but between all specimens on each island. Evolution idea Jo Cooper, bird curator at the Natural History Museum, said ‘What's fantastic about these two birds is that visitors will be able to see for themselves the crucial differences that Darwin saw and perhaps be inspired.' Remarkable differences Floreana mockingbird - only 200 left alive In support of an international effort to reintroduce the bird to Floreana, the bird group at the Natural History Museum at Tring has provided access to the collection it cares for to allow DNA sampling of two historic specimens. The two birds sampled are the Floreana mockingbird, collected by Charles Darwin, (one of the specimens on display in the exhibition) and another specimen collected by Robert FitzRoy, captain of HMS Beagle. DNA tests Discover the man and the revolutionary theory that changed our understanding of the world and our place within it at Darwin, an exhibition celebrating Charles Darwin's ideas and their impact, giving new insight into the achievements of this brilliant observer of nature. The exhibition is a highlight of Darwin200, a national programme of events celebrating Charles Darwin's ideas, impact and influence around the two hundredth anniversary of his birth. www.darwin200.org
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