Ecological Speciation [[electronic resource]] |
Autore | Nosil Patrik |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Oxford, : OUP Oxford, 2012 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (299 p.) |
Disciplina | 576.86 |
Collana | Oxford Series in Ecology and Evolution |
Soggetto topico |
Evolution
Species Symbiogenesis |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-280-59456-X
9786613624390 0-19-162801-8 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Contents; Introduction; Abbreviations; Part I: Ecological speciation and its alternatives; 1 What is ecological speciation?; 1.1. The often-continuous nature of the speciation process; 1.2. Ecological speciation via divergent natural selection; 1.3. A brief history of the ecological speciation hypothesis; 1.4. Alternatives to ecological speciation; 1.5. Other roles for ecology in speciation: population persistence and niche conservatism; 1.6. Summary; 2 Predictions and tests of ecological speciation; 2.1. Comparative approaches (ERG); 2.2. Trait-based approaches ("magic traits")
2.3. Fitness-based approaches (selection = RI)2.4. Gene-flow-based approaches (isolation-by-adaptation); 2.5. Phylogenetic shifts method; 2.6. Inferring causality when testing for ecological speciation; 2.7. Tests and predictions of ecological speciation: conclusions and future directions; Part II: Components of ecological speciation; 3 A source of divergent selection; 3.1. Differences between environments; 3.2. Interactions among populations; 3.3. The functional morphology and biomechanics of divergent selection; 3.4. Environmentally dependent sexual selection 3.5. Interactions between the different sources of divergent selection3.6. Sources of divergent selection: conclusions; 4 A form of reproductive isolation; 4.1. The different forms of reproductive isolation; 4.2. How common are different forms of reproductive isolation during ecological speciation?; 4.3. For a given point in the speciation process, do multiple reproductive barriers act, and what are their relative contributions to total reproductive isolation?; 4.4. Across the ecological speciation process, at what point do different barriers evolve? 4.5. Forms of reproductive isolation: conclusions and future directions5 A genetic mechanism to link selection to reproductive isolation; 5.1. Genetics of ecological speciation: the theory of divergence hitchhiking; 5.2. Linking selection to reproductive isolation via pleiotropy; 5.3. Linking selection to reproductive isolation via linkage disequilibrium; 5.4. Genetic constraints on ecological speciation; 5.5. The individual genetic basis of traits under selection and traits conferring reproductive isolation; 5.6. Ecological speciation genes 5.7. Genetic mechanisms: conclusions and future directionsPart III: Unresolved issues; 6 The geography of ecological speciation; 6.1. Geographic views and definitions of speciation; 6.2. Non-allopatric speciation: geographic contact constrains divergence; 6.3. Non-allopatric speciation: geographic contact promotes divergence; 6.4. The balance between constraining and diversifying effects of gene flow; 6.5. Multiple geographic modes of divergence; 6.6. Two problems with detecting divergence in the face of gene flow 6.7. Detecting divergence in the face of gene flow: comparative geographic approaches |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910461123003321 |
Nosil Patrik | ||
Oxford, : OUP Oxford, 2012 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Ecological Speciation [[electronic resource]] |
Autore | Nosil Patrik |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Oxford, : OUP Oxford, 2012 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (299 p.) |
Disciplina | 576.86 |
Collana | Oxford Series in Ecology and Evolution |
Soggetto topico |
Evolution
Species Symbiogenesis |
ISBN |
0-19-162802-6
1-280-59456-X 9786613624390 0-19-162801-8 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Contents; Introduction; Abbreviations; Part I: Ecological speciation and its alternatives; 1 What is ecological speciation?; 1.1. The often-continuous nature of the speciation process; 1.2. Ecological speciation via divergent natural selection; 1.3. A brief history of the ecological speciation hypothesis; 1.4. Alternatives to ecological speciation; 1.5. Other roles for ecology in speciation: population persistence and niche conservatism; 1.6. Summary; 2 Predictions and tests of ecological speciation; 2.1. Comparative approaches (ERG); 2.2. Trait-based approaches ("magic traits")
2.3. Fitness-based approaches (selection = RI)2.4. Gene-flow-based approaches (isolation-by-adaptation); 2.5. Phylogenetic shifts method; 2.6. Inferring causality when testing for ecological speciation; 2.7. Tests and predictions of ecological speciation: conclusions and future directions; Part II: Components of ecological speciation; 3 A source of divergent selection; 3.1. Differences between environments; 3.2. Interactions among populations; 3.3. The functional morphology and biomechanics of divergent selection; 3.4. Environmentally dependent sexual selection 3.5. Interactions between the different sources of divergent selection3.6. Sources of divergent selection: conclusions; 4 A form of reproductive isolation; 4.1. The different forms of reproductive isolation; 4.2. How common are different forms of reproductive isolation during ecological speciation?; 4.3. For a given point in the speciation process, do multiple reproductive barriers act, and what are their relative contributions to total reproductive isolation?; 4.4. Across the ecological speciation process, at what point do different barriers evolve? 4.5. Forms of reproductive isolation: conclusions and future directions5 A genetic mechanism to link selection to reproductive isolation; 5.1. Genetics of ecological speciation: the theory of divergence hitchhiking; 5.2. Linking selection to reproductive isolation via pleiotropy; 5.3. Linking selection to reproductive isolation via linkage disequilibrium; 5.4. Genetic constraints on ecological speciation; 5.5. The individual genetic basis of traits under selection and traits conferring reproductive isolation; 5.6. Ecological speciation genes 5.7. Genetic mechanisms: conclusions and future directionsPart III: Unresolved issues; 6 The geography of ecological speciation; 6.1. Geographic views and definitions of speciation; 6.2. Non-allopatric speciation: geographic contact constrains divergence; 6.3. Non-allopatric speciation: geographic contact promotes divergence; 6.4. The balance between constraining and diversifying effects of gene flow; 6.5. Multiple geographic modes of divergence; 6.6. Two problems with detecting divergence in the face of gene flow 6.7. Detecting divergence in the face of gene flow: comparative geographic approaches |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910790150203321 |
Nosil Patrik | ||
Oxford, : OUP Oxford, 2012 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|