Developmental Ecology in Microbial Integration Architecture Theory (MIAT) This paper introduces Developmental Ecology as a theoretical framework within Microbial Integration Architecture Theory (MIAT). Rather than viewing development as the outcome of isolated biological systems or predetermined genetic programs, Developmental Ecology conceptualizes development as an emergent process arising from continuous interactions among microbial ecosystems, immune calibration, metabolic organization, physiological regulation, and ecological participation across time. The framework explores how developmental trajectories emerge through ecological engagement, adaptive calibration, pathway formation, bottlenecks, resilience processes, and cross-layer biological integration. Particular attention is given to the emergence of coherence as a defining property of adaptive architecture, reflecting the coordinated organization of multiple biological domains within changing ecological environments. This work proposes that development is best understood not as the accumulation of biological components, but as the progressive integration of biological relationships into increasingly coherent adaptive architectures. The paper provides a conceptual foundation for future theoretical development, empirical investigation, and systems-level approaches to understanding development within ecological and microbial contexts. Keywords: Developmental Ecology, Microbial Integration Architecture Theory, MIAT, Developmental Biology, Systems Biology, Ecological Development, Biological Integration, Adaptive Architecture, Coherence, Microbiome.
Henny Hendiyani Irjanti (Mon,) studied this question.
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