Evolutionary biologists often use phenotypic differences between species and between individuals to gain an understanding of organismal design. The focus of much recent attention has been on developmental plasticity - the environmentally induced variability during development within a single genotype. The phenotypic variation expressed by single reproductively mature organisms throughout their life, traditionally the subject of many physiological studies, has remained under-exploited in evolutionary biology. Phenotypic flexibility, the reversible within-individual variation, is a function of environmental conditions varying predictably (e.g. with season), or of more stochastic fluctuations in the environment. Here, we provide a common frame...
Phenotypic plasticity – the ability of an individual organism to alter its features in direct respon...
Phenotypic plasticity is defined as the property of organisms to produce distinct phenotypes in resp...
Phenotypic plasticity is ubiquitous and generally regarded as a key mechanism for enabling organisms...
Evolutionary biologists often use phenotypic differences between species and between individuals to ...
Evolutionary biologists often use phenotypic differ-ences between species and between individuals to...
Organisms have a remarkable capacity to respond to environmental change. They can either respond dir...
We introduce a novel model for continuous reversible phenotypic plasticity. The model includes a one...
With rapid and less predictable environmental change emerging as the 'new norm', understanding how i...
Synopsis In the past decade, there has been a resurgent interest in whether and how phenotypic plast...
Biologists have a long history of arguing about the relative importance of organisms and environment...
Phenotypic plasticity is the primitive character state for most if not all traits. Insofar as develo...
Mainstream evolutionary biology lacks a mature theory of phenotype. Following from the Modern Synthe...
When organisms encounter environments that are heterogeneous in time, phenotypic plasticity is often...
Phenotypic plasticity – the ability of an individual organism to alter its features in direct respon...
Phenotypic plasticity is defined as the property of organisms to produce distinct phenotypes in resp...
Phenotypic plasticity is ubiquitous and generally regarded as a key mechanism for enabling organisms...
Evolutionary biologists often use phenotypic differences between species and between individuals to ...
Evolutionary biologists often use phenotypic differ-ences between species and between individuals to...
Organisms have a remarkable capacity to respond to environmental change. They can either respond dir...
We introduce a novel model for continuous reversible phenotypic plasticity. The model includes a one...
With rapid and less predictable environmental change emerging as the 'new norm', understanding how i...
Synopsis In the past decade, there has been a resurgent interest in whether and how phenotypic plast...
Biologists have a long history of arguing about the relative importance of organisms and environment...
Phenotypic plasticity is the primitive character state for most if not all traits. Insofar as develo...
Mainstream evolutionary biology lacks a mature theory of phenotype. Following from the Modern Synthe...
When organisms encounter environments that are heterogeneous in time, phenotypic plasticity is often...
Phenotypic plasticity – the ability of an individual organism to alter its features in direct respon...
Phenotypic plasticity is defined as the property of organisms to produce distinct phenotypes in resp...
Phenotypic plasticity is ubiquitous and generally regarded as a key mechanism for enabling organisms...