The topology of evolutionary novelty and innovation in macroevolution

Author:

Erwin Douglas H.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Paleobiology MRC-121, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, PO Box 37012, DC 20013-7012, USA

2. Santa Fe Institute, 1399 Hyde Park Road, Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA

Abstract

Sewall Wright's fitness landscape introduced the concept of evolutionary spaces in 1932. George Gaylord Simpson modified this to an adaptive, phenotypic landscape in 1944 and since then evolutionary spaces have played an important role in evolutionary theory through fitness and adaptive landscapes, phenotypic and functional trait spaces, morphospaces and related concepts. Although the topology of such spaces is highly variable, from locally Euclidean to pre-topological, evolutionary change has often been interpreted as a search through a pre-existing space of possibilities, with novelty arising by accessing previously inaccessible or difficult to reach regions of a space. Here I discuss the nature of evolutionary novelty and innovation within the context of evolutionary spaces, and argue that the primacy of search as a conceptual metaphor ignores the generation of new spaces as well as other changes that have played important evolutionary roles. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Process and pattern in innovations from cells to societies’.

Funder

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference102 articles.

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3. The Topology of the Possible

4. The topology of the possible: formal spaces underlying patterns of evolutionary change;Stadler BMR;J. Theor. Biol.,2001

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