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- Coevolution abstract "In biology, coevolution is "the change of a biological object triggered by the change of a related object." Coevolution can occur at many biological levels: it can be as microscopic as correlated mutations between amino acids in a protein, or as macroscopic as covarying traits between different species in an environment. Each party in a coevolutionary relationship exerts selective pressures on the other, thereby affecting each other's evolution. Coevolution of different species includes the evolution of a host species and its parasites (host–parasite coevolution), and examples of mutualism evolving through time. Evolution in response to abiotic factors, such as climate change, is not biological coevolution (since climate is not alive and does not undergo biological evolution).The general conclusion is that coevolution may be responsible for much of the genetic diversity seen in normal populations including: blood plasma polymorphism, protein polymorphism, histocompatibility systems, etc.Some scientists believe that there is little evidence of coevolution driving large-scale changes in Earth's history, since abiotic factors such as mass extinction and expansion into ecospace seem to have triggered the formation of major taxanomic groups. However, this perspective is likely due to the lack of information on coevolution, rather than its real importance. One example of a coevolutionary event that profoundly shaped the history of life is when organisms adapted to oxygen. The evolution of photosynthesis that infused the atmosphere with oxygen, and the reciprocal evolution of respiration that used the oxygen for metabolism, is one of the most significant events in the evolution of life, and is, in fact, an instance of coevolution. The effects of coevolution have been best documented at the level of populations and species. For example, the concept of coevolution was briefly described by Charles Darwin in On the Origin of Species, and developed in detail in Fertilisation of Orchids. It is likely that viruses and their hosts may have coevolved in various scenarios.The parasite host relationship is probably what drove the prevalence of sexual reproduction over the more efficient asexual reproduction. It seems that most sources determine that when a host is infected by a parasite, sexual reproduction affords a chance of resistance, through variation in the next generation, giving sexual reproduction viability for fitness not seen in the asexual reproduction, which would only generate another generation of the organism susceptible to infection by the same parasite.Coevolution is primarily a biological concept, but has been applied by analogy to fields such as computer science, sociology / International Political Economy and astronomy.".
- Coevolution thumbnail Bombus_6867.JPG?width=300.
- Coevolution wikiPageExternalLink ww0902a.htm.
- Coevolution wikiPageExternalLink coevolution-6703.
- Coevolution wikiPageExternalLink 4599807.
- Coevolution wikiPageID "190835".
- Coevolution wikiPageRevisionID "605444194".
- Coevolution hasPhotoCollection Coevolution.
- Coevolution subject Category:Biology_terminology.
- Coevolution subject Category:Ecological_processes.
- Coevolution subject Category:Environmental_terminology.
- Coevolution subject Category:Evolutionary_biology.
- Coevolution subject Category:Habitat.
- Coevolution type Abstraction100002137.
- Coevolution type Act100030358.
- Coevolution type Activity100407535.
- Coevolution type EcologicalProcesses.
- Coevolution type Event100029378.
- Coevolution type Procedure101023820.
- Coevolution type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Coevolution type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Coevolution comment "In biology, coevolution is "the change of a biological object triggered by the change of a related object." Coevolution can occur at many biological levels: it can be as microscopic as correlated mutations between amino acids in a protein, or as macroscopic as covarying traits between different species in an environment. Each party in a coevolutionary relationship exerts selective pressures on the other, thereby affecting each other's evolution.".
- Coevolution label "Co-evolutie".
- Coevolution label "Coevolución".
- Coevolution label "Coevolution".
- Coevolution label "Coevoluzione".
- Coevolution label "Coevolução".
- Coevolution label "Coévolution".
- Coevolution label "Koevolution".
- Coevolution label "Koewolucja".
- Coevolution label "Коэволюция".
- Coevolution label "تطور مشترك".
- Coevolution label "共同演化".
- Coevolution label "共進化".
- Coevolution sameAs Koevoluce.
- Coevolution sameAs Koevolution.
- Coevolution sameAs Συνεξέλιξη.
- Coevolution sameAs Coevolución.
- Coevolution sameAs Coévolution.
- Coevolution sameAs Koevolusi.
- Coevolution sameAs Coevoluzione.
- Coevolution sameAs 共進化.
- Coevolution sameAs 공진화.
- Coevolution sameAs Co-evolutie.
- Coevolution sameAs Koewolucja.
- Coevolution sameAs Coevolução.
- Coevolution sameAs m.01b23d.
- Coevolution sameAs Q208841.
- Coevolution sameAs Q208841.
- Coevolution sameAs Coevolution.
- Coevolution wasDerivedFrom Coevolution?oldid=605444194.
- Coevolution depiction Bombus_6867.JPG.
- Coevolution isPrimaryTopicOf Coevolution.