Integrating ecology and evolution in a spatial context : the 14th Special Symposium of the British Ecological Society held at Royal Holloway College, University of London, 29-31 August, 2000
著者
書誌事項
Integrating ecology and evolution in a spatial context : the 14th Special Symposium of the British Ecological Society held at Royal Holloway College, University of London, 29-31 August, 2000
Blackwell Science, 2001
- : hbk
- : pbk
大学図書館所蔵 全8件
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  福岡
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The profound consequences of the deceptively obvious statement that plants stand still but their genes don't are only just becoming clear. In this volume, an international team of authors, experts in the field of population biology, aim to advance our understanding of ecological and evolutionary processes by integrating them within a common frame of reference; space. Processes operating at three different spatial scales are examined; that of the population, the metapopulation and geographical range. Themes that recur at these different scales include spatial population dynamics, population genetics at boundaries, the imprint of spatial population dynamics upon genetic structure, adaptation, evolution of mating systems and the consequences of population genetics for ecological dynamics. Whilst the focus is largely on plants, all of the questions addressed in this volume are equally applicable to animals and several authors write about both. It will be a valuable tool for researchers and advanced students, not only in this field, but also evolutionary biology and resource management.
目次
List of Contributors History of the British Ecological Society PrefacePart I: Populations:1. Plants Stand Still, But Their Genes Don't: Non-Trivial Consequences Of The Obvious: Silvertown2. Causes And Effects Of Small-Scale Spatial Structure In Plant Populations: Law, Purves, Murrell & Dieckmann3. Inferences About Spatial Processes In Plant Populations From The Analysis Of Molecular Markers: Ennos4. Mating Systems And Population Genetic Structure In The Light Of Coalescent Theory: Charlesworth & Pannell5. Spatially Explicit Studies On The Ecology And Genetics Of Population Margins: Antonovics, Newman & Best6. The Scale Of Local Adaptation In Forest Plants: Bell, Lechowicz & WaterwayPart II: Metapopulations:7. Spatially Realistic Models Of Metapopulation Dynamics And Their Implications For Ecological, Genetic And Evolutionary Processes: Hanski8. Landscape Fragmentation And The Viability Of Plant Populations: Eriksson & Ehrlen9. The Interaction Of Genetic And Demographic Processes In Plant Metapopulations: A Case Study Of Silene Alba: Mccauley, Richards, Emery, Smith & Mcglothlin10. The Demography And Genetics Of Host-Pathogen Interactions: Burdon & Thrall11. Spatial Dynamics Of Cytoplasmic Male Sterility: Frank & Barr12. The Evolution Of Seed Heteromorphism In A Metapopulation: Interactions Between Dispersal And Dormancy: OliveriPart III: Geography:13. Inferring Glacial Refugia And Historical Migrations With Molecular Phylogenies: Hewitt & Ibrahim14. From Spatial Patterns Of Genetic Diversity To Postglacial Migration Processes In Forest Trees@ Petit, Bialozyt, Brewer, Cheddadi & Comps15. Comparative Phylogeography Of Northwestern North America: A Synthesis: Brunsfeld, Sullivan, Soltis & Soltis16. A Geographical Context For The Evolution Of Plant Reproductive Systems: Barrett, Dorken & Case17. Adaptation At The Edge Of A Species' Range: Barton18. The Unified Neutral Theory Of Biodiversity And Biogeography: A Synopsis Of The Theory And Some Challenges Ahead: Hubbell Index.
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