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  1. Evolution in Space and Time: The Second Synthesis of Ecology, Evolutionary Biology, and the Philosophy of Biology.Mitchell Ryan Distin - 2023 - Self-published because fuck the leeches of Big Publishing.
    Change is the fundamental idea of evolution. Explaining the extraordinary biological change we see written in the history of genomes and fossil beds is the primary occupation of the evolutionary biologist. Yet it is a surprising fact that for the majority of evolutionary research, we have rarely studied how evolution typically unfolds in nature, in changing ecological environments, over space and time. While ecology played a major role in the eventual acceptance of the population genetic viewpoint of evolution in the (...)
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  2. Genetic Evolvability: Using a Restricted Pluralism to Tidy Up the Evolvability Concept.Mitchell Ryan Distin - forthcoming - London, UK: Springer Nature.
    Advances in the empirical sectors of biology are beginning to reveal evolvability as a major evolutionary process. Yet evolvability’s theoretical role is still intensely debated. Since its inception nearly thirty years ago, the evolvability research front has put a strong emphasis on the non-genetic mechanisms that influence the short-term evolvability of individuals within populations by causing phenotypic heterogeneity, such as developmental trait plasticity, phenotypic plasticity, modularity, the G-P map, robustness, and/or epigenetic variation. However, genetic evolvability mechanisms such as mutation or (...)
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    The Coming of Age of Evolvability. [REVIEW]Mitchell Ryan Distin - 2023 - BioScience 74 (3).
    Evolvability—which, in its broadest sense, means any causal factor that influences an evolutionary system’s ability to evolve (e.g., epistatic interactions, constraints, standing genetic variation)—could be the most significant addition to evolutionary theory since neutral theory in the 1980s, and Hansen and colleagues’ Evolvability: A Unifying Concept in Evolutionary Biology? (2023) is a major step forward for the maturation of the concept of evolvability. According to Hansen and colleagues, since evolvability research exploded onto the scene in the 1990s, the concept has (...)
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