scholarly journals Developmental plasticity as a cohesive evolutionary process between sympatric alternate-year insect cohorts

Heredity ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 108 (3) ◽  
pp. 236-241 ◽  
Author(s):  
P C Watts ◽  
D J Thompson
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luigi Pontieri ◽  
Arjuna Rajakumar ◽  
Ab Matteen Rafiqi ◽  
Rasmus Stenbak Larsen ◽  
Ehab Abouheif ◽  
...  

AbstractAnts exhibit remarkable phenotypic diversity and, with over approximately 16,000 species across 6 continents, represent one of the most evolutionarily and ecologically successful groups of animals. All ants are eusocial with a reproductive division of labor between morphologically and/or behaviourally distinct castes within a single species. This has made ants an ideal system to study core questions of eco-evo-devo (ecological evolutionary developmental biology) by highlighting the role of developmental plasticity, epigenetics, ancestral developmental potentials, modularity, and major evolutionary transitions in the evolutionary process. Yet, despite their importance for eco-evo-devo, no complete ontological series for an ant has been published to date. We therefore present the first developmental table in ants, from egg to adult, for the Myrmicine ant Monomorium pharaonis. We identified and characterized 17 embryonic stages, 3 larval instars, and prepupal/pupal development. We found that the majority of landmarks identified during embryogenesis in the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster are conserved in M. pharaonis. Furthermore, we can morphologically discriminate reproductive larvae (queen and male-destined larvae) from one another after the 1st larval instar. Finally, this ontological series of M. pharaonis will serve as a blueprint for the generation of future ant developmental tables, which is key to understanding how the remarkable diversity in ants evolved.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (25) ◽  
pp. 6429-6437 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dolores R. Piperno

The development of agricultural societies, one of the most transformative events in human and ecological history, was made possible by plant and animal domestication. Plant domestication began 12,000–10,000 y ago in a number of major world areas, including the New World tropics, Southwest Asia, and China, during a period of profound global environmental perturbations as the Pleistocene epoch ended and transitioned into the Holocene. Domestication is at its heart an evolutionary process, and for many prehistorians evolutionary theory has been foundational in investigating agricultural origins. Similarly, geneticists working largely with modern crops and their living wild progenitors have documented some of the mechanisms that underwrote phenotypic transformations from wild to domesticated species. Ever-improving analytic methods for retrieval of empirical data from archaeological sites, together with advances in genetic, genomic, epigenetic, and experimental research on living crop plants and wild progenitors, suggest that three fields of study currently little applied to plant domestication processes may be necessary to understand these transformations across a range of species important in early prehistoric agriculture. These fields are phenotypic (developmental) plasticity, niche construction theory, and epigenetics with transgenerational epigenetic inheritance. All are central in a controversy about whether an Extended Evolutionary Synthesis is needed to reconceptualize how evolutionary change occurs. An exploration of their present and potential utility in domestication study shows that all three fields have considerable promise in elucidating important issues in plant domestication and in agricultural origin and dispersal research and should be increasingly applied to these issues.


Author(s):  
V.I. Bol’shakov ◽  
◽  
Yu.I. Dubrov ◽  
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 98-125
Author(s):  
Saodah Abd. Rahman ◽  
Abu Sadat Nurallah

The Islamic Awakening in Malaysia has brought about the consciousness of adopting and practicing the Islamic way of life. The process of implementing the principles of Islam is based on a gradual evolutionary process, rather than a drastic approach. Therefore, the selective implementation of Islamic law has been carried out relatively smoothly. For that reason, various institutions have been established ‒ such as, Islamic universities, Islamic banking and insurance companies, and other Islamic organizations and institutions. The case studies in this article related to Malaysia are: The Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), Angkatan Belia Islam Malaysia – ABIM (Malaysian Islamic Youth Movement), and some Islamic institutions, which play important roles in the Islamic Awakening and solidarity in Malaysia. The PAS and ABIM are the prominent Islamic parties and movements, respectively, which can be regarded as the driving force behind the Islamic Awakening in Malaysia. Based on a tridimensional perspective ‒ that is, socioeconomic well-being and the strength of the expansion of Islamic education, and political stability ‒ this study highlights the accomplishment of Islamic Awakening in Malaysia.


2013 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 599-606 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi-Min HUANG ◽  
Meng-Ying XIA ◽  
Shi HUANG

Author(s):  
Adam Butt ◽  
M. Scott Donald ◽  
F. Douglas Foster ◽  
Susan Thorp ◽  
Geoff Warren
Keyword(s):  

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