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Evolvability: A Quantitative-Genetics Perspective

Thomas F. Hansen, Christophe Pélabon

2021Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics93 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The concept of evolvability emerged in the early 1990s and soon became fashionable as a label for different streams of research in evolutionary biology. In evolutionary quantitative genetics, evolvability is defined as the ability of a population to respond to directional selection. This differs from other fields by treating evolvability as a property of populations rather than organisms or lineages and in being focused on quantification and short-term prediction rather than on macroevolution. While the term evolvability is new to quantitative genetics, many of the associated ideas and research questions have been with the field from its inception as biometry. Recent research on evolvability is more than a relabeling of old questions, however. New operational measures of evolvability have opened possibilities for understanding adaptation to rapid environmental change, assessing genetic constraints, and linking micro- and macroevolution.

Topics & Concepts

EvolvabilityMacroevolutionEvolutionary biologyAdaptation (eye)BiologyMicroevolutionPopulationGeneticsSociologyPhylogenetic treeGeneDemographyNeuroscienceGenetic diversity and population structureAnimal Behavior and ReproductionEvolution and Genetic Dynamics
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