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Encyclopedia > Coevolution
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Bumblebees and the flowers they pollinate co-evolve so that the flower is dependent on the bee and the bee is dependent on the flower for survival

In Biology, Co-evolution is the mutual evolutionary influence between two species that become dependent on each other. Each party in a co-evolutionary relationship exerts selective pressures on the other, thereby affecting each others' evolution. Coevolution is an extreme example of mutualism.


Examples include pollination of orchids by hummingbirds. These species co-evolve because the birds are dependent on the flowers for nectar and the flowers are dependent on the birds to spread their pollen so they can reproduce. The evolutionary process has led to long_billed birds and deep flowers.


Co_evolution also occurs between predator and prey species (see Red Queen).


Co-evolution is also used to refer to evolutionary interactions between and even within molecules in the field of molecular evolution (for example, between hormones and receptors). This usage has existed at least since the term "molecular coevolution" was coined by G. Dover in 1984.


Co-evolution is one of the techniques used for generating artificial life. Bodies (bars and actuators) are evolved together with neurons in a simulated environment.


External link

  • Wiki discussing co-evolution terminology (http://www2.demo.cs.brandeis.edu/cgi-bin/coec-wiki?HomePage)

Bibliography

  • Michael Pollan The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-eye View of the World Bloomsbury ISBN 0747563004 Account of the co-evolution of plants and humans





  Results from FactBites:
 
TP: Gene-culture Coevolution (2887 words)
Gene-culture coevolution in human beings appears to be based on gene-culture transmission, a process of organismic growth and development in which innate learning capacities respond to certain forms or types of cultural information in preference to others, demarcating the central tendencies around which cultural diversity plays.
But while natural selection figures prominently in gene-culture coevolution, as it does in the more familiar kin selection and reciprocal altruism of animal sociobiology, the outcomes of its effect on social populations can be very different from those expected on the basis of genetic evolution alone.
Gene-culture coevolution is a causal whirlpool in history, where culture is shaped by biological imperatives and genes shift in response to changing cultural opportunities.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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