“…The spatiotemporal analysis of wnt genes expression in the beetle Tribolium castaneum showed that several ligands overlap in the posterior zone, segments/parasegments, and head lobes, suggesting functional redundancy (Bolognesi et al, 2008a). However, when we compiled wnt genes expression patterns including the other panarthropods (Janssen et al, 2010;Hogvall et al, 2014;Janssen and Posnien, 2014;Constantinou et al, 2016;Holzem et al, 2019;Chavarria et al, 2021;Janssen et al, 2021), we found that overlapping is common, although diverse patterns are still observed (Figure 2). Based on the degree of patterning conservation, we were able to classify the expression of Wnt ligands as highly (Wnt1, Wnt5, Wnt6, Wnt7, and Wnt11), moderately (Wnt8, Wnt10, Wnt16, and WntA), and poorly (Wnt2, Wnt4, and Wnt9) conserved, which might suggest that the function of some of these ligands-and not others-would be essential for posterior growth in most panarthropods.…”