Developing an integrated understanding of the evolution of arthropod segmentation using fossils and evo-devo
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Developing an integrated under ...
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Issue date
2019-10-02Submitted date
2019-08-12Subject Terms
evo-devoArthropoda
palaeontology
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Show full item recordAbstract
Segmentation is fundamental to the arthropod body plan. Understanding the evolutionary steps by which arthropods became segmented is being transformed by the integration of data from evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo), Cambrian fossils that allow the stepwise acquisition of segmental characters to be traced in the arthropod stem-group, and the incorporation of fossils into an increasingly well-supported phylogenetic framework for extant arthropods based on genomic-scale datasets. Both evo-devo and palaeontology make novel predictions about the evolution of segmentation that serve as testable hypotheses for the other, complementary data source. Fossils underpin such hypotheses as arthropodization originating in a frontal appendage and then being co-opted into other segments, and segmentation of the endodermal midgut in the arthropod stem-group. Insights from development, such as tagmatization being associated with different modes of segment generation in different body regions, and a distinct patterning of the anterior head segments, are complemented by palaeontological evidence for the pattern of tagmatization during ontogeny of exceptionally preserved fossils. Fossil and developmental data together provide evidence for a short head in stem-group arthropods and the mechanism of its formation and retention. Future breakthroughs are expected from identification of molecular signatures of developmental innovations within a phylogenetic framework, and from a focus on later developmental stages to identify the differentiation of repeated units of different systems within segmental precursors.Citation
Chipman Ariel D. and Edgecombe Gregory D. 2019Developing an integrated understanding of the evolution of arthropod segmentation using fossils and evo-devoProc. R. Soc. B.28620191881 http://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2019.1881Publisher
The Royal SocietyType
Journal ArticleItem Description
Copyright © 2019 The Author(s). The attached file is the published version of the article.NHM Repository
ISSN
0962-8452EISSN
1471-2954ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1098/rspb.2019.1881
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