Humans have adapted to fight off the damaging effects of solar radiation in many different ways. Developmental adaptations were acquired through natural selection according to the location of a certain group of people. People who live in areas closer to the equator are more exposed to solar radiation and have a darker pigment with more melanin and produce a type called eumelanin, which helps protect them from damaging UV rays. While people in northern parts of the world with less direct exposure to solar radiation produce less melanin in a form called pheomelanin. These people such as European Americans are at ten times the risk of malignant skin cancers than darker pigmented skin people such as African Americans in the United States.
Some people may have a higher exposure of solar radiation according to the time of year. During the spring and summer months people may be more exposed to solar radiation due to warm weather and longer days. As a short-term adaptation these people may tan and have a darker pigment than they do during the winter and fall seasons due to participating in more outdoor activities and wearing less protective clothing. When these warm seasons disappear or if they are on vacation in a location where solar radiation is greater then return home, their pigmentation and melanin levels will return to normal.
A person who grew up and was raised in a region where solar radiation is high may have a darker pigmentation and higher melanin levels to help protect them from the danger of radiation exposure. If that individual moves to an area with much lower levels of solar radiation, in time their skin pigmentation will become lighter and their melanin levels may change. They may also become more prone to sun burn when visiting the place they have grown up in after years of adapting to less solar radiation as a kind of facultative adaptation.
Locals in Hawaii (personal pic) |
Tourists in Hawaii |
Studying the effects of the adaptation of skin pigment and melanin due to solar radiation can be very useful scientifically and socially. It also allows us to understand why some people are more susceptible to the dangers of solar radiation to help develop ways to lessen the exposure to the threat. It also allows us to make advances in medicine and educate people on the damaging effects of solar radiation. Socially, it breaks down the barrier of misconceptions and the social stigma of race associated with skin color.
Understanding the variation of adaptation in skin color allows us to see from a scientific standpoint why different people of different regions have the skin pigment that they do. It also allows us to see that color is no more that natures way of protecting people from the elements and not at all a reason for division of class, economic status or opportunity. Rather, it is nature's way of evening things out a bit by giving better survival tools to people in regions who need it most. In a way, skin color naturally makes us more equal rather than racially unequal.
Yes, solar radiation impacts us negatively due to the way it can damage our skin. When you talk about how it affects our skin color, you are actually discussing the adaptations, not the impact of radiation on homeostasis. Are there any positive impacts we feel from solar radiation?
ReplyDeleteOkay on your discussion on developmental adaptations. I appreciate how you note the different pigmentations in higher and lower latitudes, but why do people at higher latitudes have lighter skin? Wouldn't it be safer to just maintain higher melanin levels?
Tanning is a facultative adaptation to solar radiation. Humans actually don't have a short term adaptation to solar radiation, which is why it is so dangerous a stress.
You actually discuss developmental adaptations twice and leave out a discussion on facultative adaptations?
Good discussion on cultural adaptations.
Excellent explanation on how this information can be used productively.
I completely agree with what you are arguing in your final section, but how does this reflect on the value of the concept of race? Can we use race in a productive way? Or, as a social construct, not a biological one, is it impossible to use race to understand human variation in any meaningful way?
Good images.
Your post was really informational. I like all the facts your incorporated regarding pigmentation and solar radiation.I understand your final argument. I agree that different pigments are the only thing that may come from different races and it has not much to do with behavior.
ReplyDeleteI very much agree with the statement you make in your last paragraph regarding our differences and our differences. I also mentioned in my post that these differences were ways for individuals to survive better in the environment they were from. When our bodies are exposed to extreme anything, hot or cold, they adapt in many different ways to help us survive. We are not different for any other reason. One is not better or worse than the other, it is solely a means of survival.
ReplyDeleteThe adaption of the human race to various different levels of solar radiation exposure is clearly shown throughout the world. In locations in which there is a lot of sunlight throughout the year people have darker skin pigmentation than those who live in locations where there isn't as much solar radiation exposure. I enjoyed your answer for number 4 because its true we are all equal and our skin color just shows how our bodies have adapted to the various different levels of solar radiation throughout the world.
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