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Understanding Evo-Devo

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Why do the best-known examples of evolutionary change involve the alteration of one kind of animal into another very similar one, like the evolution of a bigger beak in a bird? Wouldn't it be much more interesting to understand how beaks originated? Most people would agree, but until recently we didn't know much about such origins. That is now changing, with the growth of the interdisciplinary field evo-devo, which deals with the relationship between how embryos develop in the short term and how they (and the adults they grow into) evolve in the long term. One of the key questions is: can the origins of structures such as beaks, eyes, and shells be explained within a Darwinian framework? The answer seems to be yes, but only by expanding that framework. This book discusses the required expansion, and the current state of play regarding our understanding of evolutionary and developmental origins.

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  • Asks what evo-devo is, how it originated, and how it changes our views of the nature of the short-term process of embryonic and postembryonic development, and the long-term process of evolution
  • Emphasizes that neither evolution nor development can be fully understood without an appreciation of how each process interacts with the other
  • Weaves together information from developmental biology, evolutionary biology, genetics and palaeontology
  • Gives readers a feel for what is known and what is not yet known about this important subject
Author: Wallace Arthur
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 206
ISBN: 9781108819466
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2021

Preface
Acknowledgements
1. What is evo-devo and why is it important?
2. Antecedents of evo-devo
3. Evolutionary and developmental essentials
4. Evo-devo essentials
5. The evolution of variations on a theme
6. The evolutionary origins of themes and novelties
7. The evolutionary origins of body plans
8. Body plan features and toolkit genes
9. Bringing it all together
Concluding remarks
Summary of common misunderstandings
References
Index.

Wallace Arthur is Emeritus Professor of Zoology at the National University of Ireland, Galway.

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