Developmental plasticity and the origin of species differences
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Abstract
Speciation is the origin of reproductive isolation and divergence between populations, according to the "biological species concept" of Mayr. Studies of reproductive isolation have dominated research on speciation, leaving the origin of species differences relatively poorly understood. Here, I argue that the origin of species differences, and of novel phenotypes in general, involves the reorganization of ancestral phenotypes (developmental recombination) followed by the genetic accommodation of change. Because selection acts on phenotypes, not directly on genotypes or genes, novel traits can originate by environmental induction as well as mutation, then undergo selection and genetic accommodation fueled by…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 55
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Reproductive isolation
- Evolutionary biology
- Phenotypic plasticity
- Genetics
- Genetic divergence
- Genetic algorithm
- Adaptation (eye)
- Life in Land