Epigenetic Landscapes and the New Evolutionary Paradigm
The traditional Modern Synthesis, which has dominated evolutionary biology since the mid-twentieth century, posits that macroevolutionary change is the result of gradual accumulations of random genetic mutations filtered through natural selection. However, this gene-centric view often struggles to explain the rapid appearance of complex novel traits and the remarkable stasis seen in the fossil record. Epigenetic phenotypic plasticity offers a more robust framework for understanding macroevolution by prioritizing the ability of an organism to change its phenotype in response to environmental cues without altering its underlying DNA sequence. At the heart of this argument is the plasticity-first hypothesis. Unlike the Modern Synthesis, which requires a lucky mutation to occur before adaptation can act, phenotypic plasticity allows a population to immediately occupy a new adaptive peak through developmental adjustment. When an environment shifts, organisms utilize existing regulatory netw...