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heterogenes

Heterogenes is a term that appears in some older or non-specialist biological writings to denote the production or presence of different kinds from a common origin. In modern usage, it is not a widely adopted term in standard taxonomic or genetic nomenclature, and when it does appear it is often in historical or theoretical discussions rather than as a current technical label.

Etymology and general sense

The word derives from Greek roots meaning "different" (heteros) and "born" or "produced" (genēs, genein). As a

Related concepts and interpretations

Because heterogenes is not a fixed term in contemporary biology, its intended meaning varies by author. In

Current status

Today, the terms heterogeneity, heterogenesis, polyphenism, mosaicism, and chimerism are preferred for precise descriptions of variation

See also

Heterogeneity, Heterogenesis, Polyphenism, Mosaicism, Chimerism.

result,
heterogenes
is
typically
associated
with
processes
or
states
in
which
variation
arises
within
a
lineage,
organism,
or
developmental
program.
some
contexts
it
aligns
with
broader
ideas
of
heterogeneity
or
heterogony,
describing
evolution
or
development
that
yields
multiple
forms
from
a
single
source.
Related
and
more
widely
used
concepts
include
genetic
mosaicism
(coexistence
of
genetically
distinct
cells
within
an
individual),
chimerism
(fusion
of
distinct
zygotes
resulting
in
a
single
organism
with
multiple
genotypes),
and
polyphenism
(distinct
phenotypes
arising
from
the
same
genotype
in
response
to
environmental
cues).
and
developmental
plasticity.
Heterogenes
is
largely
historical
or
informal,
encountered
mainly
in
discussions
of
foundational
ideas
about
variation
rather
than
as
a
defined
category
in
modern
genetics
or
developmental
biology.