Tinkering: The Microevolution of DevelopmentISBN: 978-0-470-03429-3
Hardcover
300 pages
July 2007
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Much recent research in evolutionary developmental biology has
focused on the origin of new body plans. However, most evolutionary
change at the population and species level consists of tinkering:
small-scale alterations in developmental pathways within a single
body plan. Such microevolutionary events have been well studied on
a population genetic level and from the perspective of adaptive
phenotypic evolution, but their developmental mechanisms remain
poorly studied.
This book explores both theoretical and practical issues of tinkering. It features a wide range of perspectives to address several fundamental questions. How does tinkering occur developmentally, and how is it manifested phenotypically? Are the developmental mechanisms by which tinkering occur different from those that underlie larger evolutionary changes? What are the developmental constraints on tinkering? And how do we test hypotheses about microevolutionary shifts in development from the fossil record?
With contributions from experts in a range of fields, this fascinating book makes exciting reading for anyone studying evolution, developmental biology or genetics.