Julian Huxley showed that within-species (static) allometric (power-law) relations can arise from proportional growth regulation with the exponent in the power law equaling the factor of proportionality. Allometric exponents may therefore be hard to change and act as constraints on the independent evolution of traits. In apparent contradiction to this, many empirical studies have concluded that static allometries are evolvable. Many of these studies have been based, however, on a broad definition of allometry that includes any monotonic shape change with size, and do not falsify the hypothesis of constrained narrow-sense allometry. Here, we present the first phylogenetic comparative study of narrow-sense allometric exponents based on a rean...
Artificial selection offers a powerful tool for the exploration of how selection and development sha...
To what extent within-species (static) allometries constitute a constraint on evolution is the subje...
The developmental independence of alternative phenotypes is key to evolutionary theories of phenotyp...
Julian Huxley showed that within-species (static) allometric (power-law) relations can arise from pr...
Morphological traits often covary within and among species according to simple power laws referred t...
Precise exponential scaling with size is a fundamental aspect of phenotypic variation. These allomet...
Morphological allometry is striking due to its evolutionary conservatism, making it an example of a ...
Precise exponential scaling with size is a fundamental aspect of phenotypic variation. These allomet...
Sexual dimorphism is widely viewed as adaptive, reflecting the evolution of males and females toward...
Allometric scaling describes the relationship of trait size to body size within and among taxa. The ...
Allometric studies measure the scaling changes between different body parts and these often have imp...
Morphological allometry refers to patterns of covariance between body parts resulting from variation...
The consequences of sex-specific selection for patterns of diversification remain poorly known. Beca...
The scaling of body parts is central to the expression of morphology across body sizes and to the ge...
Covariation among organismal traits is nearly universal, occurring both within and among species (st...
Artificial selection offers a powerful tool for the exploration of how selection and development sha...
To what extent within-species (static) allometries constitute a constraint on evolution is the subje...
The developmental independence of alternative phenotypes is key to evolutionary theories of phenotyp...
Julian Huxley showed that within-species (static) allometric (power-law) relations can arise from pr...
Morphological traits often covary within and among species according to simple power laws referred t...
Precise exponential scaling with size is a fundamental aspect of phenotypic variation. These allomet...
Morphological allometry is striking due to its evolutionary conservatism, making it an example of a ...
Precise exponential scaling with size is a fundamental aspect of phenotypic variation. These allomet...
Sexual dimorphism is widely viewed as adaptive, reflecting the evolution of males and females toward...
Allometric scaling describes the relationship of trait size to body size within and among taxa. The ...
Allometric studies measure the scaling changes between different body parts and these often have imp...
Morphological allometry refers to patterns of covariance between body parts resulting from variation...
The consequences of sex-specific selection for patterns of diversification remain poorly known. Beca...
The scaling of body parts is central to the expression of morphology across body sizes and to the ge...
Covariation among organismal traits is nearly universal, occurring both within and among species (st...
Artificial selection offers a powerful tool for the exploration of how selection and development sha...
To what extent within-species (static) allometries constitute a constraint on evolution is the subje...
The developmental independence of alternative phenotypes is key to evolutionary theories of phenotyp...