Episodes in insect evolution

  • Bradley T
  • Briscoe A
  • Brady S
  • et al.
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Abstract

This article derives from a society-wide symposium organized by Timothy Bradley and Adriana Briscoe and presented at the 2009 annual meeting of the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology in Boston, Massachusetts.David Grimaldi provided the opening presentation in which he outlined the major evolutionary events in the formation and subsequent diversification of the insect clade. This presentation was followed by speakers who detailed the evolutionary history of specific physiological and/or behavioral traits that have caused insects to be both ecologically successful and fascinating as subjects for biological study. These include a review of the evolutionary history of the insects, the origins of flight, osmoregulation, the evolution of tracheal systems, the evolution of color vision, circadian clocks, and the evolution of eusociality. These topics, as covered by the speakers, provide an overview of the pattern and timing of evolutionary diversification and specialization in the group of animals we know as insects. (This article was written and prepared by U.S. Government employee(s) on official time, and is therefore in the public domain.)

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APA

Bradley, T. J., Briscoe, A. D., Brady, S. G., Contreras, H. L., Danforth, B. N., Dudley, R., … Yanoviak, S. P. (2009). Episodes in insect evolution. Integrative and Comparative Biology, 49(5), 590–606. https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/icp043

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