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Developmental constraints versus flexibility in morphological evolution

PatrÍcia Beldade (), Kees Koops and Paul M. Brakefield
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PatrÍcia Beldade: Leiden University
Kees Koops: Leiden University
Paul M. Brakefield: Leiden University

Nature, 2002, vol. 416, issue 6883, 844-847

Abstract: Abstract Evolutionary developmental biology has encouraged a change of research emphasis from the sorting of phenotypic variation by natural selection to the production of that variation through development1. Some morphologies are more readily generated than others, and developmental mechanisms can limit or channel evolutionary change2. Such biases determine how readily populations are able to respond to selection3, and have been postulated to explain stasis in morphological evolution4 and unexplored morphologies5. There has been much discussion about evolutionary constraints6,7,8 but empirical data testing them directly are sparse9,10. The spectacular diversity in butterfly wing patterns11 is suggestive of how little constrained morphological evolution can be. However, for wing patterns involving serial repeats of the same element, developmental properties suggest that some directions of evolutionary change might be restricted12,13. Here we show that despite the developmental coupling between different eyespots in the butterfly Bicyclus anynana, there is great potential for independent changes. This flexibility is consistent with the diversity of wing patterns across species and argues for a dominant role of natural selection, rather than internal constraints, in shaping existing variation.

Date: 2002
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DOI: 10.1038/416844a

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