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Genotype-Phenotype Map

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The genotype-phenotype map (G-P map) is the mapping from genetic variation to phenotypic variation — the function or relation that specifies how changes in DNA sequence alter observable traits. It is not a simple one-to-one correspondence. It is a complex, many-to-many relation mediated by developmental dynamics, epigenetic regulation, and environmental interaction.

The structure of the G-P map determines the evolutionary accessibility of phenotypes. If the map is smooth — small genetic changes produce small phenotypic changes — then natural selection can navigate toward adaptive peaks gradually. If the map is rugged — characterized by epistasis, pleiotropy, and developmental thresholds — then evolutionary trajectories become path-dependent and may become trapped on local optima.

Recent theoretical work frames the G-P map as a geometric object: a manifold or network whose topology constrains which phenotypes are reachable from which genotypes. This topological framing connects the G-P map to morphospace theory and to the study of robustness and evolvability in biological systems.