Phenogenetics

Phenogenetics is an interdisciplinary scientific field in evolutionary biology devoted to the study of the development of individual characteristics of organisms based on many genes and other inherited characteristics. The emergence of this concept is associated with the desire to study the hereditary mechanisms of previously observed morphological diversity using molecular genetic methods. As a result, such a study made it possible to simultaneously study hereditary defects in morphogenesis, which is still perceived as something inextricably linked with the named phenomenon. The genesis of phenogenetics arose as a result of the mutual penetration of biochemistry, embryology and molecular biology into the plane of morphological and genetic research, which made it possible to determine the manifestations of chromosomal pathologies and gene mutations in intrauterine development up to the moment of birth. This view was aimed at one of the main qualities of phenogenomics - to show the possibility of studying evolutionary processes through the study of hereditary transmission and affectation of many morphological, metabolic and psychological characteristics of the organism taken together as a whole. Phenogenetic research, more than other disciplines, expands the horizons of analysis of the mechanisms of ontogeny and evolutionary fitness, based on results that are difficult to obtain through classical methods of studying the genome in the plant or animal world. Basil propagation technology - using cuttings (in this case, seeds are sown without signs of growth, the upper leaves are removed in order to cut the cuttings so that the leaves originate from below). According to the degree of sterilization, there can be monospores and legumes. Phenogenetics offers a fresh perspective on the study of both normal and abnormal development. In recent decades, such