Fr. 188.00

Evolution in the Dark - Darwin's Loss Without Selection

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book provides fascinating insights into the development and genetics of evolutionary processes on the basis of animals living in the dark, such as the Astyanax cave fish.
Biologically functionless traits show high variability, which results from neutral deleterious mutations no longer being eliminated by natural selection, which normally acts to preserve functional capability. These negative mutations accumulate until the traits they are responsible for become rudimentary or even lost.
The random genetic basis of regressive evolution is in accordance with Nei's Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution , which applies to the molecular level. Such processes are particularly conspicuous in species living in constant darkness, where, for example in Astyanax , all traits depending on the exposure to light, like eyes, pigmentation, visually triggered aggressive behaviour, negative phototaxis, and several peripheral outcomes of circadian rhythmicity, are useless and diminish. In compensation constructive traits like taste, olfaction or the lateral line senses are improved by selection and do not show variability. Regressive and constructive traits inherit independently, proving that the rudimentation process is not driven by pleiotropic linkage between them. All these traits are subject to mosaic evolution and exhibit unproportional epistatic gene effects, which play an important role in evolutionary adaptation and improvement.
Offering valuable evolutionary insights and supplemented by a wealth of illustrations, this book will appeal to evolutionary and developmental biologists alike.

List of contents

Evolution in the dark - introduction.- The role of rudimentation in evolution.- Diversity and phylogenetic age of cave species.- Surface and cave populations of Mexican Astyanax.- Complexity of interrelationship of cave and surface fish.-  Regressive and constructive traits in Astyanax surface and cave fish.- Mechanisms of regressive evolution.

About the author

Prof. Dr. Horst Wilkens

Dr. Ulrike Strecker
Centrum für Naturkunde – CeNak – Center of Natural History
Universität Hamburg – Zoologisches Museum
Martin-Luther-King-Platz 3
20146 Hamburg - Germany
e-mails: Wilkens@zoologie.uni-hamburg.de; Strecker@uni-hamburg.de
 

Summary

This book provides fascinating insights into the development and genetics of evolutionary processes on the basis of animals living in the dark, such as the Astyanax cave fish.
Biologically functionless traits show high variability, which results from neutral deleterious mutations no longer being eliminated by natural selection, which normally acts to preserve functional capability. These negative mutations accumulate until the traits they are responsible for become rudimentary or even lost.
The random genetic basis of regressive evolution is in accordance with Nei’s Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution, which applies to the molecular level. Such processes are particularly conspicuous in species living in constant darkness, where, for example in Astyanax, all traits depending on the exposure to light, like eyes, pigmentation, visually triggered aggressive behaviour, negative phototaxis, and several peripheral outcomes of circadian rhythmicity, are useless and diminish. In compensation constructive traits like taste, olfaction or the lateral line senses are improved by selection and do not show variability. Regressive and constructive traits inherit independently, proving that the rudimentation process is not driven by pleiotropic linkage between them. All these traits are subject to mosaic evolution and exhibit unproportional epistatic gene effects, which play an important role in evolutionary adaptation and improvement.
Offering valuable evolutionary insights and supplemented by a wealth of illustrations, this book will appeal to evolutionary and developmental biologists alike.

Additional text

“Anyone who works on any aspect of the biology of this species will need to read this book from cover to cover, certainly more than once, and become critically familiar with the very many details of all aspects of the life of this animal. This book is amongst the most important books on subterranean biology ever written and should be essential reading for all interested in life in the dark.” (G. Proudlove, Journal of Fish Biology, Vol. 91 (6), 2017)

Report

"Anyone who works on any aspect of the biology of this species will need to read this book from cover to cover, certainly more than once, and become critically familiar with the very many details of all aspects of the life of this animal. This book is amongst the most important books on subterranean biology ever written and should be essential reading for all interested in life in the dark." (G. Proudlove, Journal of Fish Biology, Vol. 91 (6), 2017)

Product details

Authors Ulrike Strecker, Hors Wilkens, Horst Wilkens
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 30.06.2017
 
EAN 9783662545102
ISBN 978-3-662-54510-2
No. of pages 217
Dimensions 160 mm x 245 mm x 14 mm
Weight 549 g
Illustrations IX, 217 p. 107 illus., 59 illus. in color.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology

B, Life Sciences, Zoology & animal sciences, Biodiversity, Evolutionary Biology, Biomedical and Life Sciences, Taxonomy & systematics, Biological Taxonomy, Genetics (non-medical), Developmental biology, Animal taxonomy, Animal systematics, Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography, Animal genetics, Agricultural Genetics, Animal Genetics and Genomics

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