Difference between revisions of "Why did insects win?"

(Hox genes in evolution of arthropod body plans)
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* [http://www.imbb.forth.gr/people/averof/Nature95.pdf 1995 landmark paper]] on crustacean Hox genes vs insect Hox genes, enlightening
 
* [http://www.imbb.forth.gr/people/averof/Nature95.pdf 1995 landmark paper]] on crustacean Hox genes vs insect Hox genes, enlightening
 
* [http://www.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/tocs/95254765.pdf Book] that sounds extremly interesting.
 
* [http://www.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/tocs/95254765.pdf Book] that sounds extremly interesting.
 +
* [http://www.pnas.org/content/95/18/10671.short Chelicerate hox]]
  
 
===Evolution of insect flight===
 
===Evolution of insect flight===

Revision as of 19:47, 13 September 2010

It basically starts from this blog post. The question is: why are Insecta the most diverse group of arthropods, if not of living beings, on Earth's land, while Arachnida and other arthropod groups aren't?

Here I collect some material for further posts on the subject.

Sources

Evolution of Arthropoda

  • Marine evolution of Arachnida: "The oldest known scorpions lived around 430 million years ago in the Silurian period, on the bottom of shallow tropical seas.[15] These first scorpions had gills instead of the present forms' book lungs." ( Scorpion )

Genes in evolution of arthropod body plans

Evolution of insect flight

Wings as primitive tracheal gills: Evolution_of_insects#Origin_of_insect_flight

Evolution of metamorphosis

  • "The evolution of complete metamorphosis in insects is a key innovation that has led to the successful diversification of holometabolous insects," Suzuki et al. (molecular biology of pupa)


Hypothesis

  • The Pancrustacea hypothesis is intriguing because Crustaceans show also considerable diversity. Clades away from Pancrustaceans show less diversity? Measurement of morphological characters?