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Heads – Marie-Christine Maurel and Marc Ollivier

      The Explosion of Life Forms

       Living Beings and Morphology

       Coordinated by

      Georges Chapouthier

      Marie-Christine Maurel

      Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms and licenses issued by the CLA. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside these terms should be sent to the publishers at the undermentioned address:

      ISTE Ltd

      27-37 St George’s Road

      London SW19 4EU

      UK

       www.iste.co.uk

      John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      111 River Street

      Hoboken, NJ 07030

      USA

       www.wiley.com

      © ISTE Ltd 2020

      The rights of Georges Chapouthier and Marie-Christine Maurel to be identified as the authors of this work have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

      Library of Congress Control Number: 2020937596

      British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

      A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978-1-78945-005-7

      ERC code:

      LS8 Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology

       LS8_6 Phylogenetics, systematics, comparative biology

       LS8_7 Macroevolution, paleobiology

      Introduction

       Georges CHAPOUTHIER1 and Marie-Christine MAUREL2

       1 ICM-CNRS, Paris, France

       2 ISYEB-CNRS-MNHN, Sorbonne University, Paris, France

      One of the essential characteristics of living beings, perhaps the most important, is an explosion of their forms, linked to the extreme diversity of environments to which they have been able to adapt. It is precisely the multiplicity of these astonishing morphologies, in all its facets, that this book aims to explore.

      Of course, this diversity is rooted in the very origin of life itself, as Marie-Christine Maurel relates. The diversity of physical and chemical conditions on Earth during the Hadean period, as well as the diversity of planets and the multiple bodies of the solar system, may have led to the formation of molecules, organizations and protocells with a wide variety of shapes and metabolisms. The different chemical elements of the primitive ocean and fossil traces from the first stromatolites could provide evidence of this. Thus, biodiversity is original and current research is discovering multiple ways of “existing”, far from a standardized vision of life.

      In living beings that are already constituted, form becomes, as Jean-Pierre Gasc shows, a means of knowledge. From Aristotle to Cuvier, function is interpreted in relation to morphology. Nowadays, more emphasis is placed on the weight of the physical framework, which suggests that form is an adaptation to environmental constraints, as evidenced for example by the symmetry of bilaterians, the appearance of even appendages (allowing “‘appendicular’ movement on land”) or the “cephalization” of mobile animals. In the second chapter, Jean-Pierre Gasc recalls the central role of the theses of the Scottish zoologist D’Arcy Wenworth Thompson, in his famous book On Growth and Form, which holds “an almost legendary place in scientific literature” and which makes him, in a way, the prophet of the link between form and functional adaptation.

      We know today that, while genes define the major parameters of the form of living beings, the essential part, the definitive shape, is constituted by the almighty processes of epigenesis. Jonathan B. Weitzman leads us along these astonishing embryological paths which, going beyond the genetic basis, lead, in successive stages, to the generation of form in the developing embryo. Today, much is known about the epigenetic mechanisms by which environmental signals and genetic characteristics are integrated and contribute to the formation of beautiful forms, underlying the epigenetic landscape so dear to Waddington’s heart.

      The very original world of protists and bacteria is presented to us by Guillermo Paz-y-Miño-C and Avelina Espinosa. The numerous strategies by which these beings detect and communicate with each other to survive and develop offer striking examples of the explosion of forms at the microscopic level. These processes also provide a better understanding of the evolutionary strategies involved in the transformation of forms, such as inclusive selective value, whose adaptive success is due to direct descendants but also to kin selection.

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