• English
  • Hindi
  • Punjabi
  • Marathi
  • German
  • Gujarati
  • Urdu
  • Telugu
  • Bengali
  • Kannada
  • Odia
  • Assamese
  • Nepali
  • Spanish
  • French
  • Japanese
  • Arabic
  • Home
  • Noida
  • National
    • BulletsIn
    • cliQ Explainer
    • Government Policy
    • New India
  • International
    • Middle East
    • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
    • Tender News
  • Sports
    • IPL2025
  • Services
    • Lifestyle
    • How To
    • Spiritual
      • Festival and Culture
    • Tech
Notification
  • Home
  • Noida
  • National
    • BulletsIn
    • cliQ Explainer
    • Government Policy
    • New India
  • International
    • Middle East
    • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
    • Tender News
  • Sports
    • IPL2025
  • Services
    • Lifestyle
    • How To
    • Spiritual
      • Festival and Culture
    • Tech
  • Home
  • Noida
  • National
    • BulletsIn
    • cliQ Explainer
    • Government Policy
    • New India
  • International
    • Middle East
    • Foreign
  • Entertainment
  • Business
    • Tender News
  • Sports
    • IPL2025
  • Services
    • Lifestyle
    • How To
    • Spiritual
      • Festival and Culture
    • Tech
  • Noida
  • National
  • International
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Sports
CliQ INDIA > Education > Video technology has potential to revolutionise how scientists track changes in species evolution, development
Education

Video technology has potential to revolutionise how scientists track changes in species evolution, development

cliQ India
cliQ India
Share
6 Min Read
SHARE

England [UK], November 6 (ANI): Scientists have made a significant advance in the study of species evolution, providing additional proof that cutting-edge visual technology may be used to track the smallest changes in the growth of various organisms.

New research used a combination of robotic video microscopes and computer vision to measure all of the observable characteristics of embryos of three different species.

These measurements were recorded as spectra of energy and, through this, scientists were able to compare shifts between species alongside previously documented differences in the timing of discrete developmental events.

A detailed analysis of these so-called Energy Proxy Traits (EPTs) has provided researchers with the first evidence that traditionally measured timings of developmental events are associated with far broader changes to the full set of an embryo’s observable characteristics.

They also found huge changes in an embryo’s observable characteristics before and after the onset of each developmental event.

Writing in Frontiers in Physiology, the study’s authors say that applying lessons from the research has the potential to advance how development and evolution is studied, by enabling greater depth in the assessment of biological development and the ability to combine data across a wide range of species.

This is something, they add, that is particularly crucial at a time when climate and other environmental changes are having a significant – and in many cases harmful – impact on many parts of the natural world.

The study was led by scientists from the University of Plymouth’s EmbryoPhenomics Research Group, in the School of Biological and Marine Sciences, and builds on its 15-plus years of groundbreaking research into ways of monitoring embryo development.

Dr Jamie McCoy, a postdoctoral researcher – funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council – and the study’s lead author, said: “The advances highlighted in this paper are critical to addressing the fundamental question of how species differ in the way that they develop. Measuring differences in the timings of development is one of the main ways in which researchers investigate how changes in development may drive evolution. But the results from our study suggest that measuring the timings of developmental events is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of how we measure and analyse evolutionary changes. By assessing EPTs across three different species, we have seen how they could provide us with an alternative approach to understanding how development leads to evolutionary change.”

The EPT method uses timelapse video of animals during their earliest and most dynamic life stages.

Each video is composed of a series of individual pixels, whose brightness fluctuates from one frame to the next as objects – such as a beating heart, muscle contractions, or spinning of the whole embryo driven by tiny hairs – move.

Researchers can exploit these fluctuations in pixel values and convert them into frequency data, allowing them to track a huge breadth of different aspects of the biology of the animal as it develops.

The resulting visuals mean that rather than choosing individual parts of the animal to measure, scientists can capture all of its traits – such as changes in heart rate or movement – and interrogate the resulting frequency data to capture a greater breadth of its biological response.

Dr Oliver Tills, senior author on the study, has been pioneering studies into embryo phenomics since 2007 and was in 2020 awarded a UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship to advance his work. He added: “Our current understanding of biology is limited by the technologies available to observe it, and we need a new technology-enabled approach to understanding the most complex period of an organism’s life history. This study has broad implications for advancing our understanding of the nexus between biological development and evolution, and marks a significant step forward in how we might monitor the development of lifeforms all over our planet.”

Two decades of expertise in developmental biology

The EPT method used in the current study builds on pioneering work started almost 20 years ago using manual measurements.

That work was led by Dr Jennifer Smirthwaite and colleagues at the University of Plymouth and the Technical University of Munich, and documented a number of heterochronies – changes in the timings of developmental events between species – in a number of species of freshwater snail.

EPTs were applied to three species of freshwater snail from that study, and aimed to understand whether these evolutionary changes in the timings of development were associated with more high-dimensional changes to the phenotype. (ANI)

You Might Also Like

Study finds use of habitat for agricultural purposes puts primate in danger
5 Simple and Effective Self-Improvement Strategies to Transform Your Life
CA Results 2024: Top performers shine as ICAI declares results | CliqExplainer
Gene-editing provides hope for patients with inherited disorders: Study
Study finds how gut microbes play role in regulating stress responsiveness throughout day

Sign Up For Daily Newsletter

Be keep up! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp Telegram Copy Link Print
Share
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Angry0
Wink0
Previous Article Australia | Natural, Cultural, Adventurous Outdoors, Wildlife Encounters and much more
Next Article Top 10 Special Foods To Eat In Tahiti

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
XFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image

Latest News

Bengal Falta Repoll 2026: Massive Security Deployment After Election Controversy | Cliq Latest
National
May 21, 2026
Peddi Promotion Event In Bhopal: Ram Charan And AR Rahman Ready For Mega Show | Cliq Latest
Entertainment
May 21, 2026
Junior NTR Dragon Teaser Out: NTR Stuns Fans With Intense Assassin Avatar | Cliq Latest
Entertainment
May 21, 2026
KKR Vs MI IPL 2026: Manish Pandey And Bowlers Revive Kolkata Playoff Dream | Cliq Latest
Sports
May 21, 2026

//

We are rapidly growing digital news startup that is dedicated to providing reliable, unbiased, and real-time news to our audience.

We are rapidly growing digital news startup that is dedicated to providing reliable, unbiased, and real-time news to our audience.

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US

Follow US

© 2026 cliQ India. All Rights Reserved.

CliQ INDIA
  • English – अंग्रेज़ी
  • Hindi – हिंदी
  • Punjabi – ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
  • Marathi – मराठी
  • German – Deutsch
  • Gujarati – ગુજરાતી
  • Urdu – اردو
  • Telugu – తెలుగు
  • Bengali – বাংলা
  • Kannada – ಕನ್ನಡ
  • Odia – ଓଡିଆ
  • Assamese – অসমীয়া
  • Nepali – नेपाली
  • Spanish – Española
  • French – Français
  • Japanese – フランス語
  • Arabic – فرنسي
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?