Abstract

The exaggerated horns of beetles are attractive models for studying the origin of novel traits and morphological evolution. Closely related species often differ profoundly in the size, number, and shape of their horns, and in the body region from which they extend. In addition, beetle horns exhibit exquisite nutrition-dependent phenotypic plasticity, leading to disproportionate growth of the horns in the largest, best-condition individuals and much smaller - even stunted - horn sizes in poor-condition individuals. These exciting phenomena in beetle horns have recently been revealed at the molecular level with the advent of next-generation sequencing. This section reviews the latest research on a horned beetle, the Japanese rhinoceros beetle Trypoxylus dichotomus, whose genome was recently sequenced.

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