Journal
JOURNAL OF MAMMALIAN EVOLUTION
Volume 28, Issue 1, Pages 15-22Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10914-019-09487-4
Keywords
Radinsky; Morphology; Biomechanics; Adaptation; Mammals
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The relationship between form and function has been a fascinating field of study in natural sciences, with different scholars from creationists in the 19th century to modern adaptation researchers in the 20th century exploring and analyzing this connection. Significant contributions by scholars in different periods have laid the foundation for modern form-function studies and development.
The linkage between form and function is a fascinating field for intellectual analysis and contemplation in natural sciences by naturalists, biologists, anatomists, as well as philosophers and theologians. In the early nineteenth century, creationists' approaches (Cuvier-Paley) helped to install the idea of a form-function binomial that gained scientific status in the second half of that century when it was contextualized within the framework of evolution by natural selection. In the mid-twentieth century, W.J. Bock and G. von Wahlert settled the modern basis for the elucidation of adaptation based on morphology, function, environment, and their interconnections. The paleontologist Leonard Burton Radinsky made significant contributions to the development of form-function studies. Also, his posthumously published book The Evolution of Vertebrate Design (1987), inspired many young biologists to embrace form-function approaches. Radinsky emphasized the importance of looking for the behaviors or functions that are actually correlated with a particular anatomical form in living species, together with a biomechanical design analysis as looking at that anatomical structure from a biomechanical or engineering perspective. Field biology research and testing form-function correlation should be a prerequisite in adaptation research programs.
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