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Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental Integration and the Evolution of Pleiotropy

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TLDR
Three examples of how developmental integration structures pleiotropic and morphological variation in non-human primate crania, artificially-modified human crani, and for the effects ofindividual genes on murine mandibular morphology are presented.
Abstract
The different forms of morphological integration, developmental, functional, genetic, and evolutionary are defined and their theoretical relationships explored. Quantitative genetic models predict that the co-selection of traits involved in a common function will lead to pleiotropic effects at the loci affecting them while functionally-unrelated traits will be affected by separate sets of loci (Wagner, 1996). The patterns of genetic variation produced by these pleiotropic mutations and stabilizing selection for functionally and developmentally interacting traits results in their specific co-inheritance relative to other traits. This in turn leads to their co-ordinated response to selection. Therefore, functional and developmental integration lead to genetic integration which, in turn leads to evolutionary integration. Three examples of how developmental integration structures pleiotropy and morphological variation in non-human primate crania, artificially-modified human crania, and for the effects ofindividual genes on murine mandibular morphology are presented.

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Behavioral syndromes: an ecological and evolutionary overview.

TL;DR: The existence of behavioral syndromes focuses the attention of behavioral ecologists on limited (less than optimal) behavioral plasticity and behavioral carryovers across situations, rather than on optimal plasticity in each isolated situation.
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Integrating animal temperament within ecology and evolution.

TL;DR: It is proposed that temperament can and should be studied within an evolutionary ecology framework and provided a terminology that could be used as a working tool for ecological studies of temperament, which includes five major temperament trait categories: shyness‐boldness, exploration‐avoidance, activity, sociability and aggressiveness.
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Behavioral syndromes: An integrative overview

TL;DR: It is suggested that behavioral syndromes could play a useful role as an integrative bridge between genetics, experience, neuroendocrine mechanisms, evolution, and ecology.
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Homologues, natural kinds and the evolution of modularity

TL;DR: It is concluded that a combination of directional and stabilizing selection is a prevalent mode of selection and a likely explanation for the evolution of modularity.
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Morphological Integration and Developmental Modularity

TL;DR: How development produces covariation between traits can have substantial implications for understanding genetic variation and the potential for evolutionary change, but research in this area has only begun and many questions remain unanswered.
References
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Book

Introduction to quantitative genetics

TL;DR: The genetic constitution of a population: Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and changes in gene frequency: migration mutation, changes of variance, and heritability are studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

The measurement of selection on correlated characters

TL;DR: Measures of directional and stabilizing selection on each of a set of phenotypically correlated characters are derived, retrospective, based on observed changes in the multivariate distribution of characters within a generation, not on the evolutionary response to selection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative genetic analysis of multivariate evolution, applied to brain:body size allometry.

TL;DR: Methods of multivariate analysis, functional analysis and optimality criteria popular among evolutionists, do not account for dynamical constraints imposed by the pattern of genetic variation within populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phenotypic, genetic, and environmental morphological integration in the cranium.

TL;DR: Both genotype and phenotype are systems composed of interacting components and the genotype is an organic whole with an internal harmony that, when exposed to a new selection pressure, will change in a harmonious manner.
Book

Evolutionary Developmental Biology

Brian K. Hall
TL;DR: A Quantitative Genetics Model for Morphological Change in Development and Evolution, and the Geoffroy-Cuvier Debates: a Crossroads in Evolutionary Morphology.
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