Even the New Scientist article (whatever little I can read without paying) says '....is forcing us to rethink some basics of evolution'.... and.... 'However, its very existence raises some fundamental questions about genetics and evolution. We may need to look again at how adaptation occurs at the molecular level. Controversially, dark DNA might even be a driving force of evolution.'
https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg23731680-200-dark-dna-the-missing-matter-at-the-heart-of-nature/
I was going to say that I didn't know why you were quoting yet another pop-science articles when I'd pointed you at the actual paper, but I guess I know exactly why: you're just trawling for quotes that suggest that the basic mechanism of evolution might be in question.
Anyway, the "Significance" section in the published paper (which is how all the researchers presented their findings to their peers) says (in full):
"
A core question in evolutionary biology is how mutation and selection adapt and constrain species to specialized habitats. We sequenced the genome of the sand rat, a desert rodent susceptible to nutritionally induced diabetes, and discovered an unusual chromosome region skewed toward G and C nucleotides. This region includes the Pdx1 homeobox gene, a transcriptional activator of insulin, which has undergone massive sequence change, likely contributing to diabetes and adaptation to low caloric intake. Our results imply that mutation rate varies within a genome and that hotspots of high mutation rate may influence ecological adaptation and constraint. In addition, we caution that divergent regions can be omitted by conventional short-read sequencing approaches, a consideration for existing and future genome sequencing projects."
So as I said, this is about a region of the genome that has a higher rate of mutation and that may indeed affect the course of evolution. However, there really is no suggestion that the basic mechanism of evolution (variation and mutation acted on by natural selection) is being questioned. The full
New Scientist article says: "
If genes contained within these mutational hotspots have a greater chance of mutating than those elsewhere, they will display more variation on which natural selection can act, so the traits they confer will evolve faster."
Of course the difficulty in detecting 'dark DNA' may also have an impact on current understanding of individual instances of evolution because some genes may not have been detected by certain sequencing techniques.
There is a little more hype in the full
New Scientist article but even at its most speculative, it only suggests that "
...mutation rates in dark DNA may be so rapid that natural selection cannot act fast enough to remove deleterious variations in the usual way. Such genes might even become adaptive later on, if a species faces a new environmental challenge." Which I guess is possible but hardly very probable.