Repeated evolution of similar phenotypes is a widespread phenomenon found throughout the living world and it can proceed through the same or different genetic mechanisms. Cave animals with their convergent traits such as eye and pigment loss, as well as elongated appendages, are a striking example of the evolution of similar phenotypes. Yet, few cave species are amenable to genetic crossing and mapping techniques making it challenging to determine the genetic mechanisms causing their similar phenotypes. To address this limitation, we have been developing Asellus aquaticus, a freshwater isopod crustacean, as a genetic model. Many of its cave populations originate from separate colonization events and thus independently evolved their similar ...
Identifying the genetic factors that underlie complex traits is central to understanding the mechani...
Cave animals are a fascinating group of species often demonstrating characteristics including reduce...
Abstract Background Cave animals converge evolutionarily on a suite of troglomorphic traits, the bes...
Cave animals are animals that descend from surface dwelling organisms; after many generations, they ...
Understanding the process of evolution is one of the great challenges in biology. Cave animals are o...
Characteristics common to animals living in subterranean environments include the reduction or absen...
The use of model organisms in genetic research is a well-established and effective method to further...
Organisms well suited for the study of ecotype formation have wide distribution ranges, where they a...
Cave animals, compared to surface-dwelling relatives, tend to have reduced eyes and pigment, longer ...
Cave animals, compared to surface-dwelling relatives, tend to have reduced eyes and pigment, longer ...
The genetic basis of vertebrate morphological evolution has traditionally been very difficult to exa...
Caves are long-known examples of evolutionary replications where similar morphologies (troglomorphie...
A rapidly growing body of work has demonstrated that introgressive hybridization often drives patter...
Dr. Meredith Protas’ research at Dominican University of California, examining the genetic basis of ...
International audienceNatural populations subjected to strong environmental selection pressures offe...
Identifying the genetic factors that underlie complex traits is central to understanding the mechani...
Cave animals are a fascinating group of species often demonstrating characteristics including reduce...
Abstract Background Cave animals converge evolutionarily on a suite of troglomorphic traits, the bes...
Cave animals are animals that descend from surface dwelling organisms; after many generations, they ...
Understanding the process of evolution is one of the great challenges in biology. Cave animals are o...
Characteristics common to animals living in subterranean environments include the reduction or absen...
The use of model organisms in genetic research is a well-established and effective method to further...
Organisms well suited for the study of ecotype formation have wide distribution ranges, where they a...
Cave animals, compared to surface-dwelling relatives, tend to have reduced eyes and pigment, longer ...
Cave animals, compared to surface-dwelling relatives, tend to have reduced eyes and pigment, longer ...
The genetic basis of vertebrate morphological evolution has traditionally been very difficult to exa...
Caves are long-known examples of evolutionary replications where similar morphologies (troglomorphie...
A rapidly growing body of work has demonstrated that introgressive hybridization often drives patter...
Dr. Meredith Protas’ research at Dominican University of California, examining the genetic basis of ...
International audienceNatural populations subjected to strong environmental selection pressures offe...
Identifying the genetic factors that underlie complex traits is central to understanding the mechani...
Cave animals are a fascinating group of species often demonstrating characteristics including reduce...
Abstract Background Cave animals converge evolutionarily on a suite of troglomorphic traits, the bes...