Bring back the phenotype

© 2025 The Author(s). New Phytologist © 2025 New Phytologist Foundation.

Détails bibliographiques
Publié dans:The New phytologist. - 1979. - 246(2025), 6 vom: 21. Juni, Seite 2440-2445
Auteur principal: Marín, César (Auteur)
Autres auteurs: Wade, Michael J
Format: Article en ligne
Langue:English
Publié: 2025
Accès à la collection:The New phytologist
Sujets:Journal Article Review adaptationist bias epistasis gene‐centric view multilevel selection niche construction nongenetic inheritance phenotype units of selection
Description
Résumé:© 2025 The Author(s). New Phytologist © 2025 New Phytologist Foundation.
When thinking about evolutionary change, many practicing biologists will focus on changes in allele frequencies over time. This gene-centric view of evolution has strongly impacted how evolution (and biological science in general) is thought of, taught, and funded. In this viewpoint, we join recent criticisms of the gene-centric view and call for reinstalling a phenotypic view of evolution. The assumptions of the gene-centric view-enormous/nonstructured populations and totally random interactions between genes, individuals, and environments-are hard to imagine in the real world. A gene's effects on phenotype and fitness depend on its interactions with other genes (epistasis), other individuals, the microbiome, and the environment, and it changes between generations, populations, and environments. Incorrectly, genes have been given an agency and role in natural selection that they do not possess: they replicate, but they do not have phenotypic variation or differential proliferation through their traits (these are characteristics of the units of selection deemed 'interactors'). Here, we show how a phenotypic view of evolution is necessary to capture several widespread phenomena: epistasis, nongenetic inheritance, multilevel selection, and niche construction through plant-soil feedbacks, all of which have vast empirical evidence. Life is marvelous, complex, and certainly more than machinery and genetic information
Description:Date Completed 22.05.2025
Date Revised 22.05.2025
published: Print-Electronic
Citation Status MEDLINE
ISSN:1469-8137
DOI:10.1111/nph.70138