Book Description:
Contemporary research in evolutionary developmental biology ('evo-devo') has interpreted animal architecture mainly in terms of molecular genetics. Less effort has been spent on the exploitation of traditional disciplines like comparative morphology. The Development of Animal Form integrates traditional morphology and contemporary molecular genetics while incorporating research on postembryonic development. This combined approach leads to less conventional views of basic animal organization (body axes, symmetry, segments, body regions, and appendages). This book will interest graduate students and researchers of evolutionary and developmental biology, and scholars in related areas of cell biology, genetics, and zoology.
Review:
"...engaging and groundbreaking...Minelli's well-edited, well-referenced, and nicely illustrated volume is the first evo-devo book in recent decades to be written by a comparative evolutionary morphologist...This important book should be read by every graduate student whose work touches either or both of the fields of developmental and evolutionary biology." BioScience
"...a welcome addition to the growing EvoDevo literature." Biology and Philosophy
"The book is a focused effort to strike a new balance in the recently revitalized field of research known as evolutionary developmental biology, or evo-devo. To a surprising extent, given the scope and complexity of the subject matter, it succeeds...[an] important book." Quarterly Review of Biology
"This impressively scholarly book summarizes and further develops [Minelli's] work of the past 30 years...It is a 'must-read' for any practitioner in the fields of developmental and evolutionary biology..." Nature
"...an enjoyable and stimulating read...a genuine effort to reconnect evo-devo with a broader natural history. In this, it succeeds beautifully." Nature Genetics
"Alessandro Minelli's The Development of Animal Form stresses 'evo-' and, I believe, is destined to play an important role in the progressive development of the field because it effectively frames new questions and reinterprets old ones.... The book is filled with ideas, testable hypotheses, and suggestions for research projects. It moves us away from model organisms to the richness of comparative biology, always building on the foundation of the stunning successes of the model organism approach. The book is so rich in ideas that I found it hard to put down.... [The book] is a discerning and critical, yet loving, view of a dynamic field. I recommend it especially to graduate students and postdocs. It will be read with profit by those who seriously desire to mold evolutionary developmental biology." Science
"Alessandro Minelli's The Development of Animal Form is now the best example we have of morphological criticism...an important book." Stuart A. Newman, New York Medical College
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