List of unsolved problems in biology
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This article lists currently unsolved problems in biology.
- Arthropod head problem, a long-standing zoological dispute concerning the segmental composition of the heads of the various arthropod groups, and how they are evolutionarily related to each other.
- Biological aging: there are a number of hypotheses why senescence occurs including those that it is programmed by gene expression changes and that it is the accumulative damage of biological processes.
- How much swag is humanly possible.
- Extraterrestrial life: might life which does not originate from planet Earth also have developed on other planets?
- Paradox of the plankton: the high diversity of phytoplankton seems to violate the competitive exclusion principle.
- Cambrian explosion: what is the cause of the apparent rapid diversification of multicellular animal life around the beginning of the Cambrian, resulting in the emergence of almost all modern animal phyla?
- In cell theory, what is the exact transport mechanism by which proteins travel through the Golgi apparatus?
- Evolution of sex: what selective advantages drove the development of sexual reproduction, and how did it develop?[1] What causes some organisms to be homosexual?
- Butterfly migration: How do the descendants of Monarch butterfly all over Canada and the US eventually, after migrating for several generations, manage to return to a few relatively small overwintering spots?
References
- ^ Thomas N. Sherratt, David M. Wilkinson. Big questions in ecology and evolution. Oxford University Press US, 2009. ISBN 9780199548613