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Evolving pathways : key themes in evolutionary developmental biology / edited by Alessandro Minelli, Giuseppe Fusco.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2008Description: 1 online resource (xviii, 426 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780511541582 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 571.85 22
LOC classification:
  • QH491 .E966 2008
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction: pathways of change -- Part I. Thinking about Evolution by Taking Development Seriously -- Evo-devo as a discipline / Gerd B. Müller -- Making evolutionary predictions about the structure of development and morphology: beyond the neo-Darwinian and constraints paradigms / Isaac Salazar-Ciudad -- Conflicting hypotheses on the nature of mega-evolution / Wallace Arthur -- Prospects of evo-devo for linking pattern and process in the evolution of morphospace / Paul M. Brakefield -- The molecular biology underlying developmental evolution / Claudio R. Alonso -- Evo-devo's identity: from model organisms to developmental types / Ronald A. Jenner -- Part II. Evo-Devo -- Materials and Methods -- A pragmatic approach for selecting evo-devo model species in amniotes / Athanasia Tzika and Michel C. Milinkovitch -- On comparisons and causes in evolutionary developmental biology / Gerhard Scholtz -- Evolution and development: towards a synthesis of macro- and micro-evolution with ecology / Hans Zauner and Ralf J. Sommer -- When is a hox gene not a hox gene? The importance of gene nomenclature / David E.K. Ferrier -- Plants are used to having identity crises / Rolf Rutishauser, Valentin Grob and Evelin Pfeifer.
Part III. Evolving Diversity -- Unravelling body plan and axial evolution in the bilateria with molecular phylogenetic markers / Jaume Baguñà, Pere Martinez, Jordi Paps and Marta Riutort -- Are transposition events at the origin of the bilaterian hox complexes? / Jean S. Deutsch and Philippe Lopez -- Many roads lead to Rome: different ways to construct a nematode / Einhard Schierenberg and Jens Schulze -- Basal euarthropod development: a fossil-based perspective / Nigel C. Hughes, Joachim Haug and Dieter Waloszek -- Developmental transitions during the evolution of plant form / Jane A. Langdale and C. Jill Harrison; Part IV. Evolving Body Features -- Urbisexuality: the evolution of bilaterian germ cell specification and reproductive systems / Cassandra G.M. Extavour -- Thoughts and speculations on the ancestral arthropod segmentation pathway / Ariel D. Chipman -- Evolution of neurogenesis in arthropods / Angelika Stollewerk -- Arthropod appendages: a prime example for the evolution of morphological diversity and innovation / Nikola-Michael Prpic and Wim G.M. Damen -- Ontogeny of the spiralian brain / Claus Nielsen.
Summary: Evolutionary developmental biology, or 'evo-devo', is the study of the relationship between evolution and development. Dealing specifically with the generative mechanisms of organismal form, evo-devo goes straight to the core of the developmental origin of variation, the raw material on which natural selection (and random drift) can work. Evolving Pathways brings together contributions that represent a diversity of approaches. Topics range from developmental genetics to comparative morphology of animals and plants alike, and also include botany and palaeontology, two disciplines for which the potential to be examined from an evo-devo perspective has largely been ignored until now. Researchers and graduate students will find this book a valuable overview of current research as we begin to fill a major gap in our perception of evolutionary change.
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Introduction: pathways of change -- Part I. Thinking about Evolution by Taking Development Seriously -- Evo-devo as a discipline / Gerd B. Müller -- Making evolutionary predictions about the structure of development and morphology: beyond the neo-Darwinian and constraints paradigms / Isaac Salazar-Ciudad -- Conflicting hypotheses on the nature of mega-evolution / Wallace Arthur -- Prospects of evo-devo for linking pattern and process in the evolution of morphospace / Paul M. Brakefield -- The molecular biology underlying developmental evolution / Claudio R. Alonso -- Evo-devo's identity: from model organisms to developmental types / Ronald A. Jenner -- Part II. Evo-Devo -- Materials and Methods -- A pragmatic approach for selecting evo-devo model species in amniotes / Athanasia Tzika and Michel C. Milinkovitch -- On comparisons and causes in evolutionary developmental biology / Gerhard Scholtz -- Evolution and development: towards a synthesis of macro- and micro-evolution with ecology / Hans Zauner and Ralf J. Sommer -- When is a hox gene not a hox gene? The importance of gene nomenclature / David E.K. Ferrier -- Plants are used to having identity crises / Rolf Rutishauser, Valentin Grob and Evelin Pfeifer.

Part III. Evolving Diversity -- Unravelling body plan and axial evolution in the bilateria with molecular phylogenetic markers / Jaume Baguñà, Pere Martinez, Jordi Paps and Marta Riutort -- Are transposition events at the origin of the bilaterian hox complexes? / Jean S. Deutsch and Philippe Lopez -- Many roads lead to Rome: different ways to construct a nematode / Einhard Schierenberg and Jens Schulze -- Basal euarthropod development: a fossil-based perspective / Nigel C. Hughes, Joachim Haug and Dieter Waloszek -- Developmental transitions during the evolution of plant form / Jane A. Langdale and C. Jill Harrison; Part IV. Evolving Body Features -- Urbisexuality: the evolution of bilaterian germ cell specification and reproductive systems / Cassandra G.M. Extavour -- Thoughts and speculations on the ancestral arthropod segmentation pathway / Ariel D. Chipman -- Evolution of neurogenesis in arthropods / Angelika Stollewerk -- Arthropod appendages: a prime example for the evolution of morphological diversity and innovation / Nikola-Michael Prpic and Wim G.M. Damen -- Ontogeny of the spiralian brain / Claus Nielsen.

Evolutionary developmental biology, or 'evo-devo', is the study of the relationship between evolution and development. Dealing specifically with the generative mechanisms of organismal form, evo-devo goes straight to the core of the developmental origin of variation, the raw material on which natural selection (and random drift) can work. Evolving Pathways brings together contributions that represent a diversity of approaches. Topics range from developmental genetics to comparative morphology of animals and plants alike, and also include botany and palaeontology, two disciplines for which the potential to be examined from an evo-devo perspective has largely been ignored until now. Researchers and graduate students will find this book a valuable overview of current research as we begin to fill a major gap in our perception of evolutionary change.

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