Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Convergent Evolution
View through CrossRef
An analysis of convergent evolution from molecules to ecosystems, demonstrating the limited number of evolutionary pathways available to life.
Charles Darwin famously concluded On the Origin of Species with a vision of “endless forms most beautiful” continually evolving. More than 150 years later many evolutionary biologists see not endless forms but the same, or very similar, forms evolving repeatedly in many independent species lineages. A porpoise's fishlike fins, for example, are not inherited from fish ancestors but are independently derived convergent traits. In this book, George McGhee describes the ubiquity of the phenomenon of convergent evolution and connects it directly to the concept of evolutionary constraint—the idea that the number of evolutionary pathways available to life are not endless, but quite limited.
Convergent evolution occurs on all levels, from tiny organic molecules to entire ecosystems of species. McGhee demonstrates its ubiquity in animals, both herbivore and carnivore; in plants; in ecosystems; in molecules, including DNA, proteins, and enzymes; and even in minds, describing problem-solving behavior and group behavior as the products of convergence. For each species example, he provides an abbreviated list of the major nodes in its phylogenetic classification, allowing the reader to see the evolutionary relationship of a group of species that have independently evolved a similar trait by convergent evolution. McGhee analyzes the role of functional and developmental constraints in producing convergent evolution, and considers the scientific and philosophical implications of convergent evolution for the predictability of the evolutionary process.
Title: Convergent Evolution
Description:
An analysis of convergent evolution from molecules to ecosystems, demonstrating the limited number of evolutionary pathways available to life.
Charles Darwin famously concluded On the Origin of Species with a vision of “endless forms most beautiful” continually evolving.
More than 150 years later many evolutionary biologists see not endless forms but the same, or very similar, forms evolving repeatedly in many independent species lineages.
A porpoise's fishlike fins, for example, are not inherited from fish ancestors but are independently derived convergent traits.
In this book, George McGhee describes the ubiquity of the phenomenon of convergent evolution and connects it directly to the concept of evolutionary constraint—the idea that the number of evolutionary pathways available to life are not endless, but quite limited.
Convergent evolution occurs on all levels, from tiny organic molecules to entire ecosystems of species.
McGhee demonstrates its ubiquity in animals, both herbivore and carnivore; in plants; in ecosystems; in molecules, including DNA, proteins, and enzymes; and even in minds, describing problem-solving behavior and group behavior as the products of convergence.
For each species example, he provides an abbreviated list of the major nodes in its phylogenetic classification, allowing the reader to see the evolutionary relationship of a group of species that have independently evolved a similar trait by convergent evolution.
McGhee analyzes the role of functional and developmental constraints in producing convergent evolution, and considers the scientific and philosophical implications of convergent evolution for the predictability of the evolutionary process.
Related Results
Convergent transcriptomic and genomic adaptation in xeric rodents
Convergent transcriptomic and genomic adaptation in xeric rodents
ABSTRACTRepeated adaptations rely in part on convergent genetic changes. The extent of convergent changes at the genomic scale is debated and may depend on the interplay between di...
FS-convergent in norm (Fsc1 n–Convergent) in a fuzzy normed Riesz spaces
FS-convergent in norm (Fsc1 n–Convergent) in a fuzzy normed Riesz spaces
In this paper, we introduce the concept of fuzzy statistical convergent in norm (Fsc1 n- Convergent) and (Fsc1n-Cauchy) for sequence in fuzzy normed Riesz spaces (FNRS) and study s...
Relation of Offshore and Onshore Mineral Resources to Plate Tectonics
Relation of Offshore and Onshore Mineral Resources to Plate Tectonics
ABSTRACT
The Pacific and Atlantic are natural laboratories to study relations between mineral resources and plate tectonics. The distribution of mineral deposits ...
Genomic Insights into the Adaptive Convergent Evolution
Genomic Insights into the Adaptive Convergent Evolution
Adaptive convergent evolution, which refers to the same or similar phenotypes produced by species from independent lineages under similar selective pressures, has been widely exami...
Convergent evolution as an indicator for selection during acute HIV-1 infection
Convergent evolution as an indicator for selection during acute HIV-1 infection
AbstractConvergent evolution describes the process of different populations acquiring similar phenotypes or genotypes. Complex organisms with large genomes only rarely and only und...
Detecting molecular basis of phenotypic convergence
Detecting molecular basis of phenotypic convergence
AbstractConvergence is the process by which several species independently evolve similar traits. This evolutionary process is not only strongly related to fundamental questions suc...
Robust methods for detecting convergent shifts in evolutionary rates
Robust methods for detecting convergent shifts in evolutionary rates
AbstractIdentifying genomic elements underlying phenotypic adaptations is an important problem in evolutionary biology. Comparative analyses learning from convergent evolution of t...
Lagging strand encoding promotes adaptive evolution
Lagging strand encoding promotes adaptive evolution
AbstractCells may be able to promote adaptive evolution in a gene-specific and temporally-controlled manner. Genes encoded on the lagging strand have a higher mutation rate and evo...

