Monkeying around with Morphospaces

In my last post, I introduced the concept of a morphospace – the bounded range of possible shape variation that exists for a given trait in either one population of organisms or a trait shared by several related populations of organisms. Morphospaces are crucial to understanding morphological (shape) variation in two important ways: 1) determining how past evolutionary forces have acted to produce a particular morphology, and 2) predicting how current and future evolutionary forces will alter that morphology over time. In this post, I write about studying the first concept in traits that might capture facial shape change in response to climatic variation among macaques. What I found, however, was surprising.

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Conversations About Evolution and Pokémon

Having spent two summers teaching natural science at Governor’s School West in North Carolina, I’ve absorbed some valuable lessons. These lessons include how to interact with students from a wide cross-section of backgrounds who are united by an interest in science, how to collaborate with instructors who have diverse experiences and herald from various disciplines, and how to spark curiosity in students who mostly have not considered where their interests and passions will lie. To be honest, I’d never even considered teaching high schoolers before I started working at the Governor’s School. As it turns out, there’s a lot of good that comes from teaching evolution to a bunch of budding scientists.

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Monkey See, Monkey Do? Deciphering the Structure-Function Relationship in the Fossil Record

An organism’s survival is contingent on the way it moves and interacts with the environment. We can get at the relationship between a living organism’s morphology and the way it moves through direct observation and experimentation. This relationship, however, is more clandestine in fossil organisms. In our last blog post, Ben touched on the use of comparative anatomy to infer the structure-function relationship in the fossil record. In this post, I briefly explore this topic from a historical perspective and discuss its potential for evolutionary analysis. 

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Uncanny Resemblances: When a Heating Coil is like an Adaptive Peak and a Golden Retriever is like Random Genetic Drift

Some of the most interesting questions in evolutionary biology arise from both unexpected diversity and unexpected similarity among organisms. Sometimes organisms are genetically similar, yet display outward characteristics (phenotypes) that can be strikingly different. Other times, organisms display phenotypes that are astonishingly similar despite greater genetic distances.

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