Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover Page
- Half Title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Contents
- Preface
- Website Support Materials
- Acknowledgements
- About the Author
- Section One an Introduction to Evolution
- 1 Approaching Evolution
- Perspectives
- Evolutionary research today
- Systems biology
- Further readings
- Websites
- 2 A Potted History of Evolutionary Science
- The pre-Darwinian Era
- The Darwinian Era
- The era of evolutionary genetics
- The molecular era
- Further readings
- Website
- 3 The Ancient World
- The evolving earth
- Extinctions
- Four billion years of life
- Prokaryotes
- Unicellular eukaryotes
- Early large eukaryotes
- Further readings
- Websites
- 4 Life Today: Species, Diversity, and Classification
- The diversity of life today
- Defining a species
- Variation within a species
- The numbers of species today
- Taxonomies: Organising diversity
- Phylogenies and evolutionary history
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- Section two the Evidence for Evolution
- 5 Analysing Evolutionary Change
- Descent with modification is the identifier for evolution
- Cladistic links organisms by anatomical inheritance
- Linnaean and cladistic taxonomies are different
- Apparent anomalies
- Homoplasies
- Lost plesiomorphies
- Exaptations
- The broader importance of Darwin’s ideas
- Key points
- Further reading
- Websites
- 6 The Anatomical Evidence for Evolutionary Change
- The evolution of the pentadactyl limb
- The evolution of the mammalian skull
- The evolution of middle-ear bones and the reorganization of the jaw
- The evolution of the zygomatic arch
- The evolution of the secondary palate
- The evolution of mammalian teeth
- The evolution of the equidae
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 7 The Genomic Evidence
- Phylograms and cladograms are subtly different
- Constructing sequence-based phylogenetic trees
- Ancestral sequences
- Choosing sequences for phylogenetic analysis
- Three examples of molecular phylogenies
- The evolutionary status of the Amphillim 1/5 Gene
- Phylogenetic relationships among a group of anemone fish
- Phylogenetic relationships across the family of hox genes
- Gene trees, species trees, and phylogenomics
- Adding timings to phylograms
- Molecular phylogenetics today
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 8 The Evo-Devo Evidence
- The molecular basis of evo-devo homologies
- Signal and receptor homologies
- Transcription factor homologies
- Protein network homologies
- Implications of protein homologies
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- Section Three the History of Life
- 9 The First Two Billion Years
- The origin of life
- FUCA, the first universal common ancestor
- LUCA, the last universal common ancestor
- The prokaryotic seas: Eubacteria and Archaebacteria
- Eubacteria
- Archaebacteria
- FECA, the first eukaryote common ancestor
- LECA, the last eukaryote common ancestor
- Mitochondria
- Membranes and cytoskeleton
- Timings
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 10 The Roots of the Eukaryotic Tree of Life
- The diversification of the leca
- Flagella, centrioles, and basal bodies
- Cell walls
- Sexual reproduction and diploidy
- Plastids
- Protist systematics
- The origins of social behaviour
- The acquisition of multicellularity
- Fungal evolution
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- Fungi
- 11 The Evolution of Algae and Plants
- Algae
- Algal fossil record
- Evolution of algae
- Plants
- Plant evolution
- Plant systematics
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 12 The Ediacaran Period and the Early Evolution of the Metazoa
- The Ediacaran biota
- The evolution of diploblastic and triploblastic embryos
- Protostomes
- Deuterostomes
- The evolution of Urbilateria
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 13 The Cambrian Explosion and the Evolution of Protostomes
- The Cambrian fossil record
- The protostome world
- Porifera
- Coelenterata
- The Bilateria and protostome diversity
- Protostome systematics
- The major protostome phyla
- Molluscs
- Arthropods
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 14 Deuterostome Evolution: From the Beginnings to the Amphibians
- Modern deuterostome anamniotes
- Ambulacraria
- The minor chordate clades
- Craniata
- The early deuterostome fossil record
- The fish fossil record
- From water to land
- Limb evolution
- Girdle evolution
- Breathing
- Metamorphosis
- Amphibians
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 15 Vertebrate Evolution: Stem Mammals, Reptiles, and Birds
- Anatomical innovations in stem amniotes
- The evolution of the amniote egg
- The evolution of the early amniote skeleton
- The fossil record of mesozoic reptiles
- The Paleozoic Era
- The Mesozoic Era (252–66 Mya)
- The K-T extinction and the beginnings of the Cenozoic Era (66 Mya)
- The origin of flight
- Pterosaurs
- Birds
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 16 Vertebrate Evolution: Mammals
- The mammalian fossil record from the Mesozoic
- The evolution of some key mammalian features
- Changes to the skull
- Changes to soft tissues
- The evolution of the Cetacea
- Defensive adaptations
- Probosces with a second function
- Flight
- Back to the sea and the evolution of whales
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- Section Four the Mechanisms of Evolution
- 17 Variation 1: Mutations and Phenotypes
- Phenotypic variation
- Unusual variation: Sports and anomalies
- Variation leading to human disease
- Secondary variation
- Genotypic variation
- Mutation
- The effects of mutation on the genotype
- The effect of mutation on individual genes
- Larger-scale genomic changes
- Horizontal gene transfer
- The role of the environment in generating variation
- Transgenerational epigenetic inheritance (TEI)
- The wider context
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 18 Variation 2: Evolutionary Change
- Some origins of anatomical change
- Organism size
- Timing changes
- Limb variation
- Other evolutionary variants
- The effect of mutation on signaling and network systems
- Signals, receptors, and transcription factors
- Networks
- Developmental constraints on variation
- The mutational basis of trait change—The broader view
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 19 Adaptation, Symbionts, and Holobionts
- Types of adaptation
- Camouflage and mimicry
- Exaptation
- Niche construction
- Parasites
- Facilitating reproduction
- Increasing offspring numbers
- Symbiosis
- Holobiosis
- Developmental plasticity and adaptive change
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 20 Selection
- Natural selection
- The evolution of the camera eye under selection
- Sexual selection
- The advantages and disadvantages of sexual reproduction
- The sexual phenotype
- The sex ratio
- Kin selection and altruism
- The speed of change under selection
- Controlling selection
- Selective breeding
- Generating anatomical novelties
- Selection pressures imposed by humans
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 21 Evolutionary Population Genetics
- Classical population genetics
- Linkage
- Nonrandom breeding
- Migration
- Genetic drift
- The effects of selection
- Practical considerations
- Neutral theory versus selection
- Small populations and founder groups
- Quantitative and complex traits
- Gene identification
- Selfish genes
- Coalescence approaches
- Conclusion
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 22 Speciation
- Defining a species
- The breeding criterion
- The morphological criterion
- The habitat criterion
- The molecular criterion
- The timing criterion
- How new species form
- Modes of reproductive isolation
- Allopatric separation
- Peripatric speciation
- Parapatric speciation
- Sympatric separation
- The rate of speciation
- Hybrids
- Speciation speeds under allopatric conditions
- Species flocks
- Experimental speciation
- The genetics of speciation
- The key role of chromosomes
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- Section Five Human Evolution
- 23 Human Evolution 1: The Fossil Evidence
- Human fossil material
- The major hominin groups
- Possible early hominins (7–4.5 Mya)
- Archaic hominins 4.5–2.5 Mya)
- Megadont archaic hominins (2.5–1 Mya)
- Transitional hominins (∼2.5–1.4 Mya)
- Pre-modern Homo (1.9 Mya–30 Kya)
- Anatomically modern Homo (from 0.2 Mya onwards).
- Selection and speciation
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 24 Human Evolution 2: Genes and Migrations
- Information from chimpanzee genomes
- Ancient Homo DNA
- Contemporary human genomes
- Mitochondrial DNA
- Migrations within Africa
- Migrations out of Africa
- The wider picture
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 25 Human Evolution 3: The Origins of Modern Humans
- The rise of H. sapiens
- Cultural inheritance
- Tool-making
- Social living
- Speech
- Art
- The modern brain
- The origins of human differences
- Skin pigmentation
- Eye colour
- Genetic disorders
- Body differences
- Are humans still evolving?
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- 26 Conclusions
- The achievements of evolutionary science
- Contemporary challenges
- The history of life
- The mechanisms of speciation
- Is anything missing?
- The speed of evolutionary change and noncanonical heritability
- The origins of novel phenotypes
- Neurobiology and behaviour
- Origin of life
- The evolutionary future of Homo sapiens
- Is the human species still evolving
- The effect of humans on the planet
- Finally
- Websites
- Appendices
- Appendix 1: Systems Biology
- The narrow view
- The broader view
- Events within each level are complex
- There are interactions between levels
- Causality is distributed
- A note on systems terminology
- Further readings
- Websites
- Appendix 2 A History of Evolutionary Thought
- The early days
- The move to evolutionary thinking
- The early 19th century
- Lamarck: The first evolutionary scientist
- The era of Darwin
- The 19th century after Darwin
- The early 20th century
- Taxonomy
- The molecular era
- DNA sequence analysis
- Evo-devo
- Systems biology
- Further readings
- Websites
- Appendix 3 A Brief History of the World
- Appendix 4 Rocks, Dates, and Fossils
- Rock types
- Ageing rocks (geochronology)
- Paleoclimatology
- How fossils form
- Dating ancient organisms
- Further readings
- Appendix 5 Constructing Molecular Phylogenies
- Phylogenies based on shared/absent sequences
- Phylogenies based on distance matrices
- Phylogenies based on tree-searching methods
- Maximum parsimony
- Maximum likelihood
- Bayesian methods
- Phylogeny choices
- Further readings
- Websites
- Appendix 6 Three Key Model Organisms: Mouse, Drosophila, and H. sapiens
- Drosophila development
- Mouse development
- Similarities and differences
- Homo sapiens
- Further readings
- Websites
- Appendix 7 Some Principles of Animal Developmental Biology
- Driving developmental change
- How tissues form
- Tissue modules
- The origins of anatomical differences
- The role of the genome in development
- Key points
- Further readings
- Websites
- Appendix 8 Evolution and Creationism
- Creationism
- The claim
- Evolutionary criticisms of creationism
- Evolution
- The claims
- The creationists’ criticisms of evolution
- Conclusions
- Websites
- Glossary
- References
- Index
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