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Phylogeny and evo-devo: characters, homology, and the historical analysis of the evolution of development
Authors:Cracraft Joel
Affiliation:

Department of Ornithology, American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West at 79th Street, New York, New York 10027, USA

Abstract:The concept of homology continues to attract more and more commentary. In systematic and evolutionary biology the meaning of homology as synapomorphic similarity inherited from a common ancestor has gained wide acceptance over the last three or four decades. In recent years, however, developmental biologists, in particular, have argued for a new approach to, and new definition for, homology that revolves around the desire to make it more process-oriented and more mechanistic. These efforts raise questions about the relationship between developmental and evolutionary biology as well as how the evolution of development is to be studied. It is argued in this paper that this new approach to homology seemingly decouples developmental biology from the study of the evolution of development rather than to facilitate that study. In contrast, applying the notion of historical, phylogenetic homology to developmental data is inherently comparative and therefore evolutionary.
Keywords:Evo-devo   Phylogeny   Systematics   Homology   Cladistics   Comparative biology
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