International audienceThe external tissues of numerous eukaryote species show repeated colour patterns, usually characterized by units that are present at least twice on the body. These dotted, striped or more complex phenotypes carry out crucial biological functions, such as partner recognition, aposematism or camouflage. Very diverse mechanisms explaining the formation of repeated colour patterns in eukaryotes have been identified and described, and it is timely to review this field from an evolutionary and developmental biology perspective. We propose a novel classification consisting of seven families of primary mechanisms: Turing(-like), cellular automaton, multi-induction, physical cracking, random, neuromuscular and printing. In addi...
Animal colour patterns are a model system for understanding evolution because they are unusually acc...
Current interest in pattern formation can be traced to a seminal paper by Turing, who demonstrated t...
Current interest in pattern formation can be traced to a seminal paper by Turing, who demonstrated t...
SummaryVery little is known about how animal colour patterns develop. The stripes of the zebrafish p...
Colour patches are complex traits, the components of which may evolve independently through a variet...
Colour patterns are prominent features of many animals and have important functions in communication...
Patterns form with the break of homogeneity and lead to the emergence of new structure or arrangemen...
Animal integumentary coloration plays a crucial role in visual communication and camouflage, and var...
Color patterns are prominent features of many animals; they are highly variable and evolve rapidly l...
Animal integumentary coloration plays a crucial role in visual communication and camouflage, and var...
The zebrafish is a model organism for pattern formation in vertebrates. Understanding what drives th...
One of the classical problems of morphogenesis is to explain how patterns of different animals evolv...
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. The zebrafish is a model organism for pattern formation in vert...
Patterns form with the break of homogeneity and lead to the emergence of new structure or arrangemen...
Animal colour patterns are a model system for understanding evolution because they are unusually acc...
Animal colour patterns are a model system for understanding evolution because they are unusually acc...
Current interest in pattern formation can be traced to a seminal paper by Turing, who demonstrated t...
Current interest in pattern formation can be traced to a seminal paper by Turing, who demonstrated t...
SummaryVery little is known about how animal colour patterns develop. The stripes of the zebrafish p...
Colour patches are complex traits, the components of which may evolve independently through a variet...
Colour patterns are prominent features of many animals and have important functions in communication...
Patterns form with the break of homogeneity and lead to the emergence of new structure or arrangemen...
Animal integumentary coloration plays a crucial role in visual communication and camouflage, and var...
Color patterns are prominent features of many animals; they are highly variable and evolve rapidly l...
Animal integumentary coloration plays a crucial role in visual communication and camouflage, and var...
The zebrafish is a model organism for pattern formation in vertebrates. Understanding what drives th...
One of the classical problems of morphogenesis is to explain how patterns of different animals evolv...
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. The zebrafish is a model organism for pattern formation in vert...
Patterns form with the break of homogeneity and lead to the emergence of new structure or arrangemen...
Animal colour patterns are a model system for understanding evolution because they are unusually acc...
Animal colour patterns are a model system for understanding evolution because they are unusually acc...
Current interest in pattern formation can be traced to a seminal paper by Turing, who demonstrated t...
Current interest in pattern formation can be traced to a seminal paper by Turing, who demonstrated t...