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Animal evolution

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lightbulbAbout this topic
Animal evolution is the scientific study of the processes and mechanisms through which animal species change over time, driven by factors such as natural selection, genetic drift, and environmental influences. It encompasses the origins, diversification, and adaptation of animals throughout Earth's history, as understood through paleontology, genetics, and comparative anatomy.
lightbulbAbout this topic
Animal evolution is the scientific study of the processes and mechanisms through which animal species change over time, driven by factors such as natural selection, genetic drift, and environmental influences. It encompasses the origins, diversification, and adaptation of animals throughout Earth's history, as understood through paleontology, genetics, and comparative anatomy.

Key research themes

1. How fast can major evolutionary changes in animal body size occur and what constraints influence these rates?

This research theme investigates the pace of large-scale evolutionary transformations, particularly body size changes in mammals, exploring the generation times, biomechanical constraints, and asymmetries between increases and decreases in size. Understanding these rates has implications for interpreting adaptive radiations and recovery dynamics following mass extinction events.

Key finding: Developed a new metric, the clade maximum rate (CMR), to quantify large-scale body mass evolutionary rates in mammals over 70 million years. Found that terrestrial mammal mass increases of 100-, 1,000-, and 5,000-fold took a... Read more
Key finding: Detected origination hotspots ('species factories') in mammalian fossil records using computational spatial-temporal statistical approaches. Found that origination hotspots often occurred in harsh or marginal habitats rather... Read more
Key finding: Provided rigorously calibrated phylogenetic node ages spanning basal metazoans to vertebrates, emphasizing the impact of fossil and molecular data in constraining timing estimates. Highlighted how phylogenetic uncertainty... Read more

2. What molecular, developmental, and regulatory mechanisms underlie the origin of multicellularity and complex animal body plans?

This theme focuses on the evolutionary origins of animal multicellularity through genomic, developmental, and cancer biology perspectives. It interrogates the genetic toolkits pre-dating animals, mechanisms regulating cell differentiation, adhesion, and communication, and how transitions to multicellularity can be paralleled by phenomena observed in tumor evolution. Understanding these mechanisms sheds light on the emergence of complex tissue architectures and hierarchical biological organization.

Key finding: Showed that genes essential for regulating animal multicellularity, including cell adhesion, communication, and differentiation, pre-existed in unicellular relatives and were co-opted or elaborated during animal evolution.... Read more
Key finding: Integrated molecular phylogenetics and genomics with developmental, ecological, and paleontological data to refine understanding of the animal stem lineage. Highlighted the presence of complex gene regulation, cell signaling,... Read more
Key finding: Presented a theoretical model describing how functional redundancy arising from gene duplications or symbiosis reduces selective constraints, allowing degenerative changes that eventually create irreversible co-dependencies... Read more

3. How do the integration of organismal, developmental, and cognitive perspectives reshape evolutionary theory and understanding of animal evolution?

This area explores the role of organism-centered frameworks, developmental plasticity, cognitive evolution, and the integration of behavioral and physiological traits in evolutionary explanations. It encompasses theoretical debates on the Modern Synthesis versus Extended Evolutionary Synthesis, the evolution of cognition as an embodied multifactor process, and the re-integration of purposeful agency and plasticity into evolutionary thinking.

Key finding: Traced the revival of organism-centered explanations in evolutionary biology through the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis (EES), emphasizing organisms' roles in contextualizing genetic parts, focusing on reciprocal... Read more
Key finding: Identified a suite of 35 body, sensory, brain, motor, and behavioral traits across 17 metazoan lineages, revealing that only vertebrates, cephalopods, and euarthropods acquired key pivotal traits enabling complex visual... Read more
Key finding: Argued for an adaptation-focused approach to studying cognitive and behavioral evolution, distinguishing it from phylogeny-focused analysis of neurophysiological substrates. Highlighted that evolutionary pressures shape... Read more
Key finding: Proposed that consciousness is a crucial mechanism of adaptive developmental plasticity in vertebrates, arthropods, and cephalopods. By restoring mentalistic concepts historically sidelined, the paper argues for integrating... Read more

All papers in Animal evolution

Many important early biologists and psychologists assumed that nonhuman animals have mental processes such as consciousness, perception, judgment, memory, and emotions. Phylogenetic comparison, and evolutionary, developmental, ecological... more
Among non-human animals, crows, octopuses, and honeybees are well-known for their com- plex brains and cognitive abilities. Widening the lens from the idiosyncratic abilities of exem- plars like these to those of animals across the... more
Background: Ichthyosaurs are reptiles that inhabited the marine realm during most of the Mesozoic. Their Cretaceous representatives have traditionally been considered as the last survivors of a group declining since the Jurassic.... more
The rise of multicellularity represents a major evolutionary transition and it occurred independently in multiple eukaryote clades. Although simple multicellular organisms may have evolved in the Mesoproterozoic Era or even earlier,... more
The rise of animals represents a major but enigmatic event in the evolutionary history of life. In recent years, numerous studies have aimed at understanding the genetic basis of this transition. However, genome comparisons of diverse... more
Intense geological activity caused major topographic changes in Western North America over the past 15 million years. Major rivers here are composites of different ancient rivers, resulting in isolation and mixing episodes between river... more
Explaining the rapid, species-specific diversification of reproductive structures and behaviors is a long-standing goal of evolutionary biology, with recent research tending to attribute reproductive phenotypes to the evolutionary... more
Polyubiquitin genes from seven ciliate species were amplified, cloned and sequenced. It is estimated that Strombidium sulcatum, Euplotes vannus, E. rariseta and Anteholosticha manca have a polyubiquitin gene of 3 repeats, and A.... more
The Neotropics harbors a high diversity of species and several hypotheses have been proposed to account for this pattern. However, while species of forested domains are frequently studied, less is known of species from open vegetation... more
The rise of animals represents a major but enigmatic event in the evolutionary history of life. In recent years, numerous studies have aimed at understanding the genetic basis of this transition. However, genome comparisons of diverse... more
The evolutionary emergence of animals is one of the most significant episodes in the history of life, but its timing remains poorly constrained. Molecular clocks estimate that animals originated and began diversifying over 100 million... more
The rise of animals represents a major but enigmatic event in the evolutionary history of life. In recent years, numerous studies have aimed at understanding the genetic basis of this transition. However, genome comparisons of diverse... more
Deuterostomes are a monophyletic group of animals that include the vertebrates, invertebrate chordates, ambulacrarians and xenoturbellids. Fossil representatives from most major deuterostome groups, including some phylum-level crown... more
The family Oscarellidae is one of the two families in the class Homoscleromorpha (phylum Porifera) and is characterized by the absence of a skeleton and the presence of a specific mitochondrial gene, tatC. This family currently... more
Members of the cytochrome P450 family are important metabolic enzymes that are present in all metazoans. Genes encoding cytochrome P450s form a multi-gene family, and the number of genes varies widely among species. The enzymes are... more
The minimal state of consciousness is sentience. This includes any phenomenal sensory experience - exteroceptive, such as vision and olfaction; interoceptive, such as pain and hunger; or proprioceptive, such as the sense of bodily... more
Derived members of the endoparasitic order Strepsiptera have acquired an extreme form of sexual dimorphism whereby males undergo metamorphosis and exist as free-living adults while females remain larviform, reaching sexual maturity within... more
Receptors interacting with the constant domain of immunoglobulins (Igs) have a number of important functions in vertebrates. They facilitate phagocytosis by opsonization, are key components in antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity as... more
Se discute la emergencia de la pluricelularidad y de los epitelios en relacion a la aparicion de las uniones celulares, con la finalidad de ilustrar los primeros pasos de la evolucion animal. Para esto, se analizan la estructura y roles... more
Although the ability to elaborate calcium carbonate biominerals was apparently gained independently during animal evolution, members of the alpha carbonic anhydrases (α-CAs) family, which catalyze the interconversion of CO2 into HCO3-,... more
Se discute la emergencia de la pluricelularidad y de los epitelios en relacion a la aparicion de las uniones celulares, con la finalidad de ilustrar los primeros pasos de la evolucion animal. Para esto, se analizan la estructura y roles... more
Phylogeographic studies of Holarctic birds are challenging because they involve vast geographic scale, complex glacial history, extensive phenotypic variation, and heterogeneous taxonomic treatment across countries, all of which require... more
Delimiting and describing species is fundamental to numerous biological disciplines such as evolution, macroecology, and conservation. Delimiting species as independent evolutionary lineages may and often does yield different outcomes... more
The position of testudines in vertebrate phylogeny is being re-evaluated. At present, testudine morphological and molecular data conflict when reconstructing phylogenetic relationships. Complicating matters, the ecological niche of stem... more
New Zealand's endemic Stewart Island Shag (Leucocarbo chalconotus) comprises two regional groups (Otago and Foveaux Strait) that show consistent differentiation in relative frequencies of pied versus dark-bronze morphotypes, the extent of... more
Domesticated cattle were commonplace in northern Africa by about 7,000 years ago. Archaeological evidence, however, suggests they were not established in southern Africa until much later, no earlier than 2,000 years ago. Genetic... more
The focus of this study was to reconstruct a phylogenetic hypothesis for the moth subfamily Arctiinae (tiger moths, woolly bears) to investigate the evolution of larval and adult pharmacophagy of pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) and the... more
Derived members of the endoparasitic order Strepsiptera have acquired an extreme form of sexual dimorphism whereby males undergo metamorphosis and exist as free-living adults while females remain larviform, reaching sexual maturity within... more
It is now widely understood that all animals engage in complex interactions with bacteria (or microbes) throughout their various life stages. This ancient exchange can involve cooperation and has resulted in a wide range of evolved... more
Jablonka and Ginsburg (2022) argue that a) consciousness is closely tied to goal-directed behavior and an open-ended capacity for learning and adaptation driven by exploration-and-stabilization dynamics; and b) consciousness has this... more
Molecular phylogenetic analyses have produced a plethora of controversial hypotheses regarding the patterns of diversification of non-bilaterian animals. To unravel the causes for the patterns of extreme inconsistencies at the base of the... more
Background: Annelida is a morphologically diverse animal group that exhibits a remarkable variety in nervous system architecture (e.g., number and location of longitudinal cords, architecture of the brain). Despite this heterogeneity of... more
Aedes aegypti, a mosquito closely associated with humans, is the principal vector of dengue virus which currently infects about 400 million people worldwide. Because there is no way to prevent infection, public health policies focus on... more
Molecular phylogenetic analyses have produced a plethora of controversial hypotheses regarding the patterns of diversification of non-bilaterian animals. To unravel the causes for the patterns of extreme inconsistencies at the base of the... more
Deuterostomes are a monophyletic group of animals that include the vertebrates, invertebrate chordates, ambulacrarians and xenoturbellids. Fossil representatives from most major deuterostome groups, including some phylum-level crown... more
Sorex araneus, the Common shrew, is a species with more than 70 karyotypic races, many of which form parapatric hybrid zones, making it a model for studying chromosomal speciation. Hybrids between races have reduced fitness, but... more
The position of testudines in vertebrate phylogeny is being re-evaluated. At present, testudine morphological and molecular data conflict when reconstructing phylogenetic relationships. Complicating matters, the ecological niche of stem... more
Godfrey-Smith's environmental complexity thesis (ECT) is most often applied to multicellular animals and the complexity of their macroscopic environments to explain how cognition evolved. We think that the ECT may be less suited to... more
Domesticated cattle were commonplace in northern Africa by about 7,000 years ago. Archaeological evidence, however, suggests they were not established in southern Africa until much later, no earlier than 2,000 years ago. Genetic... more
Sponges branch basally in the metazoan phylogenetic tree and are thus well positioned to provide insights into the evolution of mechanisms controlling animal development, likely to remain active in adult sponges. Of the four sponge... more
Although the ability to elaborate calcium carbonate biominerals was apparently gained independently during animal evolution, members of the alpha carbonic anhydrases (α-CAs) family, which catalyze the interconversion of CO2 into HCO3-,... more
Animal minds and animal bodies evolved together. When did consciousness emerge and what animals have it? Consciousness has a distinct structure: a predictive, temporalized stream of intentional content. I argue that this structure also... more
Franciscanas are the most endangered dolphins in the Southwestern Atlantic. Due to their coastal and estuarine habits, franciscanas suffer from extensive fisheries bycatch, as well as from habitat loss and degradation. Four Franciscana... more
Molecular paleobiology is a subfield of paleontology that uses molecular biological methods on extant organisms to address geoscientifically relevant questions. Progress in the field was last reviewed in 2007, and here we highlight some... more
Franciscanas are the most endangered dolphins in the Southwestern Atlantic. Due to their coastal and estuarine habits, franciscanas suffer from extensive fisheries bycatch, as well as from habitat loss and degradation. Four Franciscana... more
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