Evolutionary Applications (Jul 2020)

Similarities in biological processes can be used to bridge ecology and molecular biology

  • Johan Hallin,
  • Angel F. Cisneros,
  • Mathieu Hénault,
  • Anna Fijarczyk,
  • Rohan Dandage,
  • Carla Bautista,
  • Christian R. Landry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.12961
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
pp. 1335 – 1350

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Much of the research in biology aims to understand the origin of diversity. Naturally, ecological diversity was the first object of study, but we now have the necessary tools to probe diversity at molecular scales. The inherent differences in how we study diversity at different scales caused the disciplines of biology to be organized around these levels, from molecular biology to ecology. Here, we illustrate that there are key properties of each scale that emerge from the interactions of simpler components and that these properties are often shared across different levels of organization. This means that ideas from one level of organization can be an inspiration for novel hypotheses to study phenomena at another level. We illustrate this concept with examples of events at the molecular level that have analogs at the organismal or ecological level and vice versa. Through these examples, we illustrate that biological processes at different organization levels are governed by general rules. The study of the same phenomena at different scales could enrich our work through a multidisciplinary approach, which should be a staple in the training of future scientists.

Keywords