Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 From Lamarck to population genetics
- 2 Overdevelopment of the synthetic theory and the proposal of the neutral theory
- 3 The neutral mutation-random drift hypothesis as an evolutionary paradigm
- 4 Molecular evolutionary rates contrasted with phenotypic evolutionary rates
- 5 Some features of molecular evolution
- 6 Definition, types and action of natural selection
- 7 Molecular structure, selective constraint and the rate of evolution
- 8 Population genetics at the molecular level
- 9 Maintenance of genetic variability at the molecular level
- 10 Summary and conclusion
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
4 - Molecular evolutionary rates contrasted with phenotypic evolutionary rates
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 From Lamarck to population genetics
- 2 Overdevelopment of the synthetic theory and the proposal of the neutral theory
- 3 The neutral mutation-random drift hypothesis as an evolutionary paradigm
- 4 Molecular evolutionary rates contrasted with phenotypic evolutionary rates
- 5 Some features of molecular evolution
- 6 Definition, types and action of natural selection
- 7 Molecular structure, selective constraint and the rate of evolution
- 8 Population genetics at the molecular level
- 9 Maintenance of genetic variability at the molecular level
- 10 Summary and conclusion
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Some features of phenotypic evolution
Pattern of evolution as exemplified by the history of vertebrates
Before we treat evolutionary rates at the molecular level, I shall briefly mention some features of phenotypic evolution as revealed by fossil records. This will help to show that the pattern of molecular evolution is quite different from that of phenotypic evolution.
Through paleontological studies in the past hundred or so years, much valuable information has been obtained on the evolutionary history since the Cambrian period (600–500 million years ago) when abundant fossil records became available. Particularly noteworthy is the elucidation of the history of vertebrates, a group to which we ourselves belong. (For authoritative accounts of this subject, see Romer, 1967, 1968 and McFarland et al., 1979.) The history of vertebrates is also relevant when we discuss the evolutionary rate of globins in the next section. So I shall summarize some relevant aspects of vertebrate history.
The oldest known true vertebrates were jawless fish, the agnatha, whose fossils are found in the Ordovician period (500–440 million years ago; for geological periods, see Fig. 4.2). Bony scales of such animals are known from late in the Cambrian period. They ranged in size from several to fifty centimeters long, and had curious appearances, with unpaired fins.
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- Information
- The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution , pp. 55 - 97Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1983
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