a leaf warbler's gleanings

random samplings of a restless mind scanning life's canopy

  • Blog
  • My lab
  • Fresno Bird Count
  • ULTRA FACES Project
  • Central Valley Café Scientifique
    • Edit
    • Delete
    • Tags
    • Autopost

    Evolving Thoughts on Homology

    Media_httpevolvethink_lireb
    via evolvingthoughts.net

    Accompanying the above intriguing illustration, John Wilkins has written a really good essay on the concept of homology, which we are taught (and go on to teach) as a really basic concept in evolution, but has surprising ambiguities and potential circularities (not unlike a few other evolutionary terms I can think of). John very helpfully traces some of the history of the term, and how its application has evolved as we've become better at building and testing phylogenies as hypotheses of evolutionary relationships. I have to agree with him when he says:

    The notion of homology is complex, and as we recently saw when I asked about the use in mathematics, it has a slew of other meanings, but the one that seems to me to be consistent across all uses is this: a homology is a mapping or “agreement” of parts of organisms with other parts of organisms. A mapping relation is not a similarity, and it is not the explanation of the relation (such as evolutionary common ancestors, which are proposed to explain the homology). It is an identity relation: this is the same as that. The identity may be an identity of place, of sequence, of developmental process, or just of a shared name, but what it is not is similarity or common ancestry. Similarity may be how we identify homology (and what kinds of similarity depends on what we use), and common ancestry may be how we explain homology, but in both cases homology is the relation itself.

    You know you'll be reading the rest of that essay for sure if you are in my class the next time I teach Evolution!

    Tags » evolution history phylogeny science
    • 16 June 2010
    • Views
    • 0 Comments
    • Permalink
    • Tweet
    • 0 responses
    • Like
    • Comment
  • Madhusudan Katti's Posterous

    I'm a reconciliation ecologist studying the responses of wildlife to human influences through an evolutionary lens. I seek ways to apply evolutionary ecology towards reconciling biodiversity conservation with human development. Also a father of two girls; photographer; birdwatcher; bookworm; cinephile; and explorer of the internets.

    Archive

    2012 (43)
    April (6)
    March (20)
    February (9)
    January (8)
    2011 (133)
    December (9)
    November (8)
    October (12)
    September (8)
    August (13)
    July (6)
    June (7)
    May (8)
    April (14)
    March (9)
    February (13)
    January (26)
    2010 (420)
    December (32)
    November (46)
    October (29)
    September (41)
    August (36)
    July (15)
    June (54)
    May (45)
    April (15)
    March (28)
    February (19)
    January (60)
    2009 (9)
    December (9)
  • About Madhusudan Katti

    I'm a reconciliation ecologist studying the responses of wildlife to human influences through an evolutionary lens. I seek ways to apply evolutionary ecology towards reconciling biodiversity conservation with human development. Also a father of two girls; photographer; birdwatcher; bookworm; cinephile; and explorer of the internets.

  • Get Updates

    Follow this Space »
    You're following this Space (Edit)
    You're a contributor here (Edit)
    This is your Space (Edit)
    Follow by email »
    Get the latest updates in your email box automatically.
    Loading...
    Subscribe via RSS
  • Sites I Like

    • Evolving Thoughts
    • Scientopia
    • The Lay Scientist | Rational Thinking
    • The Loom | Discover Magazine
    • Not Exactly Rocket Science
    • Urban Science Adventures! ©
    • Discover Blogs
    • ScienceBlogs

    Follow Me

      TwitterFacebookLinkedInFlickrBloggerScribd

Theme created for Posterous by Obox