Dear Lago, do you mean an inheritance of aquired behavior? If yes, there are math models of Baldwin effect. The models show that a purely Darwinian selection mechanism could accout for seemingly Lamarckian inheritance of learned behaviors.
Thanks for your contribution. It is new and very interesting information for me.
When I wrote the question I was thinking in the inheritance of "basal" behaviour (without experiences). Now I have more references about this with the help offered by Sasha Dall, PhD and Cora Romanow in the other question that I did.
Anyway, your opinion resolve me other questions that we did not touch. Thanks again.
Epigenetics hypothesis argue that experiences (nurture) can modify the expression of genetic information but, when there is no experience and there are different behaviours (assuming individuals of the same offspring), individuals may born with different activation of theirs genes. These kind of variation between brothers/sisters can be explained by recombination but, what happen with clons? Do they have the same behaviour (if they have the same/no experience)?
For me a developemental process is not conceivable without epigenetic processes. What should a same / no experience be? Therefore your question is for me first and foremost a semantic and epistemic problem or challenge.
McGowan PO, Szyf M. Environmental epigenomics: understanding the effects of parental care on the epigenome. Essays Biochem. 2010 Sep 20;48(1):275-87. doi: 10.1042/bse0480275. Review. PubMed PMID: 20822499.