Background Most, if not all, organisms possess the ability to alter their phenotype in direct response to changes in their environment, a phenomenon known as phenotypic plasticity. Selection can break this environmental sensitivity, however, and cause a formerly environmentally induced trait to evolve to become fixed through a process called genetic assimilation. Essentially, genetic assimilation can be viewed as the evolution of environmental robustness in what was formerly an environmentally sensitive trait. Because genetic assimilation has long been suggested to play a key role in the origins of phenotypic novelty and possibly even new species, identifying and characterizing the proximate mechanisms that underlie genetic assimilation may...
Phenotypic plasticity was once seen primarily as a constraint on adaptive evolution or merely a nuis...
Phenotypic plasticity was once seen primarily as a constraint on adaptive evolution or merely a nuis...
Mainstream evolutionary biology lacks a mature theory of phenotype. Following from the Modern Synthe...
Background Most, if not all, organisms possess the ability to alter their phenotype in direct respon...
The idea of genetic assimilation, that environmentally induced phenotypes may become genetically fix...
Whether evolutionary change can occur by genetic assimilation, or more generally by genetic accommo...
There is increasing evidence that phenotypic plasticity can promote population divergence by facilit...
Normal development depends on specific genetic and environmental inputs. When environments change, e...
Explaining the origins of novel traits is central to evolutionary biology. Longstanding theory sugge...
In addition to considerable debate in the recent evolutionary literature about the limits of the Mod...
© 2019 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved. Theory suggests that evolu...
Funders: U.S. National Science Foundation (Grant Number(s): 1855962), China Scholarship Council (Gra...
In recent years, there has been growing interest in computer modeling of the evolution of gene and c...
Mainstream evolutionary biology lacks a mature theory of phenotype. Following from the Modern Synthe...
Can a history of phenotypic plasticity increase the rate of adaptation to a new environment? Theory ...
Phenotypic plasticity was once seen primarily as a constraint on adaptive evolution or merely a nuis...
Phenotypic plasticity was once seen primarily as a constraint on adaptive evolution or merely a nuis...
Mainstream evolutionary biology lacks a mature theory of phenotype. Following from the Modern Synthe...
Background Most, if not all, organisms possess the ability to alter their phenotype in direct respon...
The idea of genetic assimilation, that environmentally induced phenotypes may become genetically fix...
Whether evolutionary change can occur by genetic assimilation, or more generally by genetic accommo...
There is increasing evidence that phenotypic plasticity can promote population divergence by facilit...
Normal development depends on specific genetic and environmental inputs. When environments change, e...
Explaining the origins of novel traits is central to evolutionary biology. Longstanding theory sugge...
In addition to considerable debate in the recent evolutionary literature about the limits of the Mod...
© 2019 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved. Theory suggests that evolu...
Funders: U.S. National Science Foundation (Grant Number(s): 1855962), China Scholarship Council (Gra...
In recent years, there has been growing interest in computer modeling of the evolution of gene and c...
Mainstream evolutionary biology lacks a mature theory of phenotype. Following from the Modern Synthe...
Can a history of phenotypic plasticity increase the rate of adaptation to a new environment? Theory ...
Phenotypic plasticity was once seen primarily as a constraint on adaptive evolution or merely a nuis...
Phenotypic plasticity was once seen primarily as a constraint on adaptive evolution or merely a nuis...
Mainstream evolutionary biology lacks a mature theory of phenotype. Following from the Modern Synthe...