Summary |
The
Modern Synthesis (of genetics and evolutionary theory) in the early 20th
Century did not assign development a
significant role in explaining why certain phenotypes were expressed. Evolutionary Developmental Biology
(evo-devo) is broadly construed as
the attempt to integrate developmental and evolutionary biology. Though discussions
about Developmental Constraints, and
morphogenetic fields (Process
Structuralism) share the same goal of bringing developmental phenomena to
bear on evolutionary arguments, papers included in the evo-devo sub-category will
be those that argue for (or against) a contemporary re-synthesis in biology
that would include developmental processes as evolvable traits. Such traits can
be selected for, and in this way development is not merely a constraint on
possible phenotypes but is itself, a trait that can evolve. This distinguishes the
category of evo-devo from other
models of the relationship between developmental phenomena and evolution. |