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How and Why Species Multiply
How and Why Species Multiply
★★★★★
★★★★★
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€40.99
Regular price
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A01=B. Rosemary Grant
A01=Peter R. Grant
Adaptive radiation
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Allele
Allopatric speciation
Author_B. Rosemary Grant
Author_Peter R. Grant
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Backcrossing
Biodiversity
Bird
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=PDZ
Category=PSAJ
Category=PSVJ
Category=PSVW6
Character displacement
Charles Darwin
Chromosomal rearrangement
Chromosome
Cocos finch
COP=United States
Daphne Major
Darwin's finches
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Directional selection
Disruptive selection
Drosophila
Ecological niche
Ecology
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eq_science
Evolution
Evolutionary biology
Evolutionary pressure
Founder effect
Gene
Gene flow
Genetic assimilation
Genetic divergence
Genetic diversity
Genetic drift
Genetic recombination
Genetic variation
Haldane's rule
Honeyeater
Hybrid (biology)
Hybrid inviability
Hybrid zone
Incipient speciation
Introgression
Language_English
Large ground finch
Magnirostris
Mating
Meiosis
Mendelian inheritance
Microsatellite
Mutation rate
Natural selection
On the Origin of Species
Organism
Ornithology
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Parapatric speciation
Peripatric speciation
Phylogenetic tree
Phylogenetics
Phylum
Population
Population bottleneck
Population genetics
Population size
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Rate of evolution
Reproduction
Reproductive isolation
Reticulate evolution
Selection coefficient
Sexual selection
softlaunch
Speciation
Species
Species diversity
Species problem
Species richness
Sympatric speciation
Sympatry
Product details
- ISBN 9780691149998
- Weight: 425g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 29 May 2011
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
- Language: English
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Charles Darwin's experiences in the Galapagos Islands in 1835 helped to guide his thoughts toward a revolutionary theory: that species were not fixed but diversified from their ancestors over many generations, and that the driving mechanism of evolutionary change was natural selection. In this concise, accessible book, Peter and Rosemary Grant explain what we have learned about the origin and evolution of new species through the study of the finches made famous by that great scientist: Darwin's finches. Drawing upon their unique observations of finch evolution over a thirty-four-year period, the Grants trace the evolutionary history of fourteen different species from a shared ancestor three million years ago. They show how repeated cycles of speciation involved adaptive change through natural selection on beak size and shape, and divergence in songs.
They explain other factors that drive finch evolution, including geographical isolation, which has kept the Galapagos relatively free of competitors and predators; climate change and an increase in the number of islands over the last three million years, which enhanced opportunities for speciation; and flexibility in the early learning of feeding skills, which helped species to exploit new food resources. Throughout, the Grants show how the laboratory tools of developmental biology and molecular genetics can be combined with observations and experiments on birds in the field to gain deeper insights into why the world is so biologically rich and diverse. Written by two preeminent evolutionary biologists, How and Why Species Multiply helps to answer fundamental questions about evolution--in the Galapagos and throughout the world.
Peter R. Grant and B. Rosemary Grant are professors emeriti at Princeton University. In recognition of their decades of work studying the ecology, behavior, genetics, and evolution of Darwin's finches, they were awarded the 2005 Balzan Prize and the 2009 Kyoto Prize.
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