| New germ lines are being created continuously, as with every act of procreation every new child has a novel, unique germ line—the only exception being identical twins. Human germ lines are being altered as they are damaged through environmental and occupational exposures and through our own personal life style choices (Yauk et al., 2015; Fowler et al., 2014). Besides, there is the foreseeable but unavoidable damage—unless rescue protocols can be used—to the germ line as a side effect of medical treatments, in particular though radiation and chemotherapy where an individual trade-off has to be made between harms and benefits. Somatic gene therapy can affect the germ line as an unintended side effect.At the level of populations, environmental pressure can, through positive selection, lead to germ line enhancement in individuals with traits that are not found ‘naturally’ in individuals in other populations, adaptation to living at high-altitude is one well-known example (Valverde et al., 2015). The persistence, in populations exposed to malaria, of sickle-cell polymorphism with heterozygote advantage is another example of adaptation to environmental pressure, while the trait over time disappears when malaria is eradicated (Hedrick, 2012). |