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  1. Homoplasy - Wikipedia

    Homoplasy, in biology and phylogenetics, is the term used to describe a feature that has been gained or lost independently in separate lineages over the course of evolution.

  2. HOMOPLASY Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    The meaning of HOMOPLASY is correspondence or similarity in form or function between parts of different species or lineages that is not attributable to common ancestry but is the result especially of …

  3. The Difference Between Homology and Homoplasy - ThoughtCo

    May 11, 2025 · Homoplasy means traits that evolved separately, like the wings of birds and bats. Homology comes from divergent evolution, and homoplasy comes from convergent evolution. Two …

  4. Homoplasy - Definition and Examples | Biology Dictionary

    Apr 27, 2017 · A homoplasy is the opposite of a homology, where a common ancestor provided the genes that gave rise to the trait in two or more animals. Often, a homoplasy will occur when two very …

  5. Homoplasy - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

    Homoplasy is the development of organs or other bodily structures within different species, which resemble each other and have the same functions, but did not have a common ancestral origin. …

  6. Homology vs. Homoplasy: What's the Difference?

    Oct 27, 2023 · Homology indicates traits inherited from a common ancestor, while homoplasy refers to similar traits evolved independently.

  7. HOMOPLASY definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary

    HOMOPLASY definition: correspondence between parts as a result of similarity of environment rather than common... | Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

  8. Homoplasy and Convergent Evolution - Article - BioLogos

    Aug 15, 2013 · Not surprisingly, this phenomenon is known as convergent evolution. For these two species, the “C” at the second position is not homologous (a similarity inherited from a common …

  9. Although homoplasy historically posed problems for phylogeneticists, it has defined fundamentally interesting questions for modern developmental genetics and evolutionary biology.

  10. Evolution - A-Z - Homoplasies - Blackwell Publishing

    A homoplasy is a character shared by a set of species but not present in their common ancestor. A good example is the evolution of the eye which has originated independently in many different species.