Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Population Genetics and Evolution

Editat de Gerdina de Jong Desene de Bas Teunissen
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 ian 2012
At least since the 1940s neo-Darwinism has prevailed as the consensus view in the study of evolution. The mechanism of evolution in this view is natural selection leading to adaptation, working on a substrate of adapta­ tionally random mutations. As both the study of genetic variation in natural populations, and the study of the mathematical equations of selec­ tion are reckoned to a field called population genetics, population genetics came to form the core in the theory of evolution. So much so, that the fact that there is more to the theory of evolution than population genetics became somewhat obscured. The genetics of the evolutionary process, or the genetics of evolutionary change, came close to being all of evolutionary biology. In the last 10 years, this dominating position of population genetics within evolutionary biology has been challenged. In evolutionary ecology, optimization theory proved more useful than population genetics for interesting predictions, especially of life history strategies. From develop­ mental biology, constraints in development and the role of internal regula­ tion were emphasized. From paleobiology, a proposal was put forward to describe the fossil record and the evolutionary process as a series of punc­ tuated equilibria; thus exhorting population geneticists to give a plausible account of how such might come about. All these developments tend to obscure the central role of population genetics in evolutionary biology.
Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 93076 lei

Preț vechi: 113507 lei
-18% Nou

Puncte Express: 1396

Preț estimativ în valută:
17819 18521$ 14773£

Carte tipărită la comandă

Livrare economică 07-21 februarie 25

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783642730719
ISBN-10: 364273071X
Pagini: 300
Ilustrații: XI, 282 p.
Dimensiuni: 170 x 244 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1988
Editura: Springer Berlin, Heidelberg
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Berlin, Heidelberg, Germany

Public țintă

Research

Descriere

At least since the 1940s neo-Darwinism has prevailed as the consensus view in the study of evolution. The mechanism of evolution in this view is natural selection leading to adaptation, working on a substrate of adapta­ tionally random mutations. As both the study of genetic variation in natural populations, and the study of the mathematical equations of selec­ tion are reckoned to a field called population genetics, population genetics came to form the core in the theory of evolution. So much so, that the fact that there is more to the theory of evolution than population genetics became somewhat obscured. The genetics of the evolutionary process, or the genetics of evolutionary change, came close to being all of evolutionary biology. In the last 10 years, this dominating position of population genetics within evolutionary biology has been challenged. In evolutionary ecology, optimization theory proved more useful than population genetics for interesting predictions, especially of life history strategies. From develop­ mental biology, constraints in development and the role of internal regula­ tion were emphasized. From paleobiology, a proposal was put forward to describe the fossil record and the evolutionary process as a series of punc­ tuated equilibria; thus exhorting population geneticists to give a plausible account of how such might come about. All these developments tend to obscure the central role of population genetics in evolutionary biology.

Cuprins

Introduction: The Place of Population Genetics in Evolutionary Biology.- Is Population Genetics Necessary for the Theory of Evolution?.- Population Genetics as a Core Theory.- The Necessity of Population Genetics for Understanding Evolution: An Ecologist’s View.- Unexploited Dimensions of Optimization Life History Theory.- Theory of Phenotypic Evolution: Genetic or Non-Genetic Models?.- Empirical Analysis of Sex Allocation in Ants: From Descriptive Surveys to Population Genetics.- Fitness and Mode of Inheritance.- Quantitative Genetics and Evolution.- The Maintenance of Genetic Variation: A Functional Analytic Approach to Quantitative Genetic Models.- Quantitative Genetic Models for Parthenogenetic Species.- Quantitative Genetics of Life History Evolution in a Migrant Insect.- The Evolution of Genetic Correlation and Developmental Constraints.- Models of Fluctuating Selection for a Quantitative Trait.- Development and Selection.- Components of Selection: An Expanded Theory of Natural Selection.- The Genetics of Information and the Evolution of Avatars.- Sib Competition as an Element of Genotype-Environment Interaction for Body Size in the Great Tit.- The Measured Genotype Approach to Ecological Genetics.- Is Population Genetics in Its Present Scope Sufficient for a Theory of Evolution?.- Adaptation.- What Is the Progress Towards Understanding the Selection Webs Influencing Melanic Polymorphisms in Insects?.- Ethanol Adaptation and Alcohol Dehydrogenase Polymorphism in Drosophila: From Phenotypic Functions to Genetic Structures.- Multigenic Selection in Plantago and Drosophila, Two Different Approaches.- The Functional Significance of Regulatory Gene Variation: The ?-Amylase Gene-Enzyme System of Drosophila melanogaster.- Population Structure.- Clonal Niche Organization in Triploid Parthenogenetic Trichoniscus pusillus: A Comparison of Two Kinds of Microevolutionary Events.- Microgeographic Variation of Genetic Polymorphism in Argyresthia mendica (Lep.: Argyresthiidae).- The Significance of Sexual Reproduction on the Genetic Structure of Populations.- Patch-Time Allocation by Insect Parasitoids: Superparasitism and Aggregation.- Developmental Constraints.- The Significance of Developmental Constraints for Phenotypic Evolution by Natural Selection.- Selection on Morphological Patterns.- Extrapolations.- The Evolutionary Potential of the Unstable Genome.- Consequences of a Model of Counter-Gradient Selection.