TY - BOOK AU - Held,Lewis I. TI - How the snake lost its legs: curious tales from the frontier of evo-devo SN - 9781107030442 AV - QH366.2 .H435 2014 U1 - 576.8 23 PY - 2014/// CY - Cambridge, United Kingdom, New York PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Evolutionary developmental biology KW - SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Evolution KW - bisacsh N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 157-2780 and index; 1. The first two-sided animal -- 2. The fly -- 3. The butterfly -- 4. The snake -- 5. The cheetah -- 6. An evo-devo bestiary -- Epilogue -- Glossary N2 - "How did the zebra really get its stripes, and the giraffe its long neck? What is the science behind camel humps, leopard spots, and other animal oddities? Such questions have fascinated us for centuries, but the expanding field of evo-devo (evolutionary developmental biology) is now providing, for the first time, a wealth of insights and answers. Taking inspiration from Kipling's 'Just So Stories', this book weaves emerging insights from evo-devo into a narrative that provides startling explanations for the origin and evolution of traits across the animal kingdom. Held's unique and engaging style makes this narrative both enlightening and entertaining, guiding students and researchers through even complex concepts and encouraging a fuller understanding of the latest developments in the field. The first five chapters cover the first bilaterally symmetric animals, flies, butterflies, snakes, and cheetahs. A final chapter surveys recent results about a menagerie of other animals"-- ER -