Читать книгу Diatom Morphogenesis - Группа авторов - Страница 23
2.1 Introduction
ОглавлениеMorphology is a conduit to assessing evolutionary relationships as well as ecological interactions among organisms. Different aspects of morphology provide information on size, shape, color, pattern of the external form of an organism, as well as internal anatomical features. Morphology is informative regarding commonalities among organisms at the species level in population studies and among larger taxonomic groupings from generic to phylum level in macroevolutionary studies. At the phylum level, body plan (bauplan) assessment enables morphological analysis across taxonomic levels, and characteristics of phylogenetic importance can be gleaned as comparative markers of continuity in arrangement of structural form.
A body plan is the group of structural characteristics of a phylum that is shared via development [2.41]. Genetic and embryogenetic processes manifest themselves throughout development, culminating in the adult form as the end member of morphogenesis. The connection among morphogenetic forms throughout development is exemplified via symmetry and symmetry breaking [2.3, 2.19, 2.24]. It is symmetry that enables assessment of body plans not only among developmental stages within a given phylum but also among phyla exhibiting commonality in some aspect of structural form.
Symmetry as an external morphological characteristic is determined via perception or observation of the “balance” of an organism. That is, we perceive or observe whether the organism exhibits some evenly distributed “likeness” of form, albeit as a reflective [2.159] or rotational [2.159] impression. To determine the “balance” or “likeness” of a given form, we necessarily perceive or observe the geometry of the organism explicitly or implicitly as an impression. To arrive at the point of recognition of the form as an identifiable entity, we perceive such characteristics as degree of curvedness (roundness) or angularity (sharpness) as well as distinct surface peaks, valleys, or saddles (local maxima or minima as extrema), if present. Surface geometry plays a key role in our perception of the quality of form [2.104–2.108]. Contours and edges are the pieces of information we gather and connect to the extrema or points (dots) that enable us to concoct a contiguous picture or image about the form we perceive or observe. This provides the initial point of determination in the assessment of symmetry of a given organism. The boundary shape of an organism as a composite of contours is instrumental in symmetry determination.
The product of morphogenesis culminates in a fixed or adult shape in which the organism will exhibit specific external and internal symmetries, usually having symmetries common to a higher taxonomic group. Structural aspects of morphology such as symmetry are evident from the morphogenetic process of each succeeding step in development. Arrangement of morphological features reiterate internal and external symmetry antecedents so that to some extent, symmetry is a directed process with regard to morphogenesis [2.54]. Symmetry is not only evident at the endpoint of morphogenesis but also at each scale of the materials involved, from genes to organelles to cells to tissues and beyond, in the morphogenetic process. That is, symmetry is hierarchical and scale dependent. Changes from juvenile to adult stages as well as differences between sexual and asexual reproduction will exhibit symmetry characteristics at each stage of development. Matching symmetry states to morphogenetic stages may inform the developmental process.
Symmetry is, then, a compilation of perception or observation as well as the arrangement of structural features (internally or externally) defining dimension (3D) and geometry (contours, surfaces, and boundaries) in terms of “balance” and “likeness”, and this compilation can be evaluated at any step in the morphogenetic and developmental processes of an organism at the individual, population, or higher taxonomic grouping level.