Most people only know two things about the appendix: You don’t need it – and if it cracksyou need surgery quickly.
Its basic history traces back at least to Charles Darwin, the English naturalist who developed the theory of natural selection. In “The Descent of Man,” he described appendix as a remnant: a remnant of herbivorous ancestors with larger digestive organs. For more than a century, that interpretation shaped both textbook and casual medical wisdom.
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Together with our colleague Helene M. Hartman, a student preparing for a career in health care, we combined our expertise in behavioral ecology, biology and history to review the scientific literature on the appendix, expecting a simple answer.
Instead, we found an organ that evolution kept reinventing, more interesting than most people imagine.
How did the appendix develop?
The The appendix is a small pouch branching of the first part of the colon. Its shape and structure vary widely across species—a hint that evolution may have fiddled with it more than once.
Some species, including certain primates such as humans and great apes, have a long, cylindrical cecum. In others, including more marsupials such as wombats and koalas, the cecum appears shorter or more funnel-shaped. Still others, including some rodents and rabbits, have different proportions or branching structures. This structural diversity suggesting that evolution has modified the organ under different ecological conditions.
That suspicion is supported by evolutionary analyses. Comparative studies show that an appendix-like structure evolved independently in at least three different genera of mammals — Marsupials, Primates and Gliders, a group which includes rodents and rabbits. A broader evolutionary study found that the appendix at least evolved separately 32 times across 361 mammal species.

When a trait develops repeatedly and independently, biologists call this convergent evolution. Convergence does not mean that a structure is indispensable. But it suggests that under certain environmental conditions, that structure gave that structure a consistent enough advantage that evolution could favor it again and again.
In other words, the appendix is hardly a useless evolutionary accident.
What does the attachment do?
The appendix supports the immune system. It contains gut-associated lymphoid tissue — immune cells embedded in the intestinal wall that help monitor microbial activity in the gut. In early life, this tissue exposes developing immune cells to gut microbes, helping the body learn to distinguish between harmless symbionts and harmful pathogens.
The appendix is particularly rich in structures called lymphoid follicles during childhood and adolescence, when the immune system is still maturing. These immune components participate in mucosal immunitywhich help regulate microbial populations along the intestinal mucosa and other mucosal surfaces. Lymphoid follicles produce antibodies, such as immunoglobulin Ato neutralize pathogens.
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Researchers have also proposed that the appendix functions as a microbial refuge. Someone has suggested it biofilms – thin, structured communities of bacteria – along the cecum. During severe gastrointestinal infections that flush out much of the gut microbiome from the colon, beneficial bacteria sheltered in these biofilms can survive and help repopulate the gut afterwards. The beneficial microbes help with digestion, compete with pathogens and interact with the immune system in ways that reduce inflammation and promote recovery.
These hypotheses motivated a question our team explored: If the appendix helps preserve microbial stability, could it subtly affect reproductive fitness if removed?
Older clinical concerns suggested that appendicitis or appendectomy could impair fertility by causing inflammation and scarring – known as tubal adhesions – in the fallopian tubes. Such scarring can physically prevent the passage of the egg to the uterus. But several large studies have done so since found no decline in fertility after appendectomy – in some cases researchers found a small increase in the pregnancy rate.
The appendix appears to have multiple functions, including immune and microbial. However, affecting fertility does not appear to be one of them.
Evolutionary significance and modern life
While the appendix has an interesting past, with evolution continually reinventing it, its modern importance is modest at best. Darwin underestimated the organ’s history, but his instinct was not far off in the medical present: Some parts of human biology mattered more in the environments in which people evolved than in the lives they live today.
Early humans lived in environments with poor sanitation and strong social contact — perfect conditions for the outbreak of pathogens that cause diarrhea. A supplement that quickly restored the microbiome after infection could significantly improve survival. But over the past century, clean water, improved sanitation and antibiotics have greatly reduced deaths from diarrheal diseases in high-income countries.
As a result, the evolutionary pressures that once favored attachment have largely disappeared. Meanwhile, have medical risk of retaining the appendix – especially appendicitis – remains. Modern surgery usually treats an infected appendix by removing it. A structure that was once a global evolutionary advantage is now more of a medical liability.
This mismatch between past adaptations and current environments illustrates a core principle in evolutionary medicine: Evolution optimizes for survival and reproduction in ancestral environments, not for health, comfort or longevity in modern ones.
Evolution operates at the level of populations over generations, favoring traits that increase average reproductive success, even if those traits sometimes harm individuals. Medicine works the other way around – helping individuals thrive in the current world rather than survive the last.
The attachment is not an IKEA spare part included “just in case”, but it is also not necessary today. Human biology has many features that were once beneficial, now marginal—and understanding them enables medicine to make better modern decisions.
This edited article has been republished from The conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read original article.






