Showing posts with label evolutionary biology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label evolutionary biology. Show all posts

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Moth Catcher: An Evolutionist'S Journey Through Canyon And Pass Review

Moth Catcher: An Evolutionist'S Journey Through Canyon And Pass
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It provides some great information about the distribution of the various silkworm moth species and how some of them have evolved in recent history, and how some of these events came to pass naturally.

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The memoir of a scientist and the wild silk moths he studiesBiologist Michael Collins has been studying wild silk moths since he was a boy. This family -- which includes the largest and most colorful of the North American moths -- led Collins into a long career as a scientist, and has provided him with significant insights into the process by which new species evolve.Moth Catcher, is Collins's engaging account of his development as a scientist and of his groundbreaking research. The canyon and pass environments of the American West offer a setting in which, since the last Ice Age, organisms have adapted to new surroundings and where many have formed new species. Collins has discovered in the Sierra Nevada that geneticists call a "hybrid zone" where two species interbreed. This hybrid zone is unusual because both sexes are fertile, unlike lab-bred hybrids between the same silk moth species. Collins explains how such hybrid populations serve as laboratories in nature where the process of speciation can be observed and studied.This book offers a fascinating view into the work of a field scientist and the ways that evolution continues to operate around us. Collins's colorful accounts of his fieldwork will delight any reader who loves the outdoors and is captivated by the diversity and interrelations of the life forms found there. And his passion for his research and the fragile, exquisite creatures that he studies will inspire a new appreciation of the wonders of the natural world and the myriad life forms that occupy it.

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Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Animal Behavior: An Introduction to Behavioral Mechanisms, Development, and Ecology Review

Animal Behavior: An Introduction to Behavioral Mechanisms, Development, and Ecology
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I have searched for a behavior book of this quality for years. The book is stocked with wonderful pictures and examples. Some examples are very familiar and others are obsecure. I believe this to be the most well written & professional assembled text on the topic I have had the priviledge of reading.

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This classic textbook is a concise introductory guide to the subject of animal behavior. The book is organized by first building the four-cornered foundations of the subject, then moving higher. In an extremely well-organized progression, the student is lead to an understanding of the essential topics, explained in logical self-contained units. Each chapter ends with suggestions for further reading. In this second edition, the coverage of mechanisms of behavior is much expanded, as is the material on evolution and natural selection. The chapter on development includes much of the new work on learning and memory, especially song-learning in birds. Indeed throughout the book, examples are drawn from recent ground-breaking research.
The latest edition of the textbook of choice in animal behaviour
Extremely well illustrated and including many classic photos by Niko Tinbergen
Uniquely well suited as an introductory text - designed for student use with a clear and logical organization founded on self-contained units


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Sunday, August 7, 2011

In Search of the Causes of Evolution: From Field Observations to Mechanisms Review

In Search of the Causes of Evolution: From Field Observations to Mechanisms
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I am a graduate student in evolutionary genetics.
This is a great collection of short reviews/perspectives from leaders in evolutionary biology. Chapters give a survey of the current state of subfields: behavior, speciation, biogeography, paleontology, human genetics, evo-devo, and others. Each chapter covers basic concepts which develop into current research agendas. Each chapter is well-written and intended for a wide audience. The authors represent a decent cross-section of leading evolution research in the West.
Who would like this book? Those with some experience with the field. Obviously, participants in research - graduates, professors, etc. - will appreciate the book's depth and breadth. Those with a more abridged background could still enjoy much of this, but the pacing and level of jargon approaches an academic journal style. Thus, many will find this book dry and esoteric.
Those looking for more of an introduction to current evolutionary research try:
Why Evolution is True - Jerry Coyne
Your Inner Fish - Neil Shubin
The Making of the Fittest - Sean B. Carroll

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Evolutionary biology has witnessed breathtaking advances in recent years. Some of its most exciting insights have come from the crossover of disciplines as varied as paleontology, molecular biology, ecology, and genetics. This book brings together many of today's pioneers in evolutionary biology to describe the latest advances and explain why a cross-disciplinary and integrated approach to research questions is so essential.

Contributors discuss the origins of biological diversity, mechanisms of evolutionary change at the molecular and developmental levels, morphology and behavior, and the ecology of adaptive radiations and speciation. They highlight the mutual dependence of organisms and their environments, and reveal the different strategies today's researchers are using in the field and laboratory to explore this interdependence. Peter and Rosemary Grant--renowned for their influential work on Darwin's finches in the Galápagos--provide concise introductions to each section and identify the key questions future research needs to address.

In addition to the editors, the contributors are Myra Awodey, Christopher N. Balakrishnan, Rowan D. H. Barrett, May R. Berenbaum, Paul M. Brakefield, Philip J. Currie, Scott V. Edwards, Douglas J. Emlen, Joshua B. Gross, Hopi E. Hoekstra, Richard Hudson, David Jablonski, David T. Johnston, Mathieu Joron, David Kingsley, Andrew H. Knoll, Mimi A. R. Koehl, June Y. Lee, Jonathan B. Losos, Isabel Santos Magalhaes, Albert B. Phillimore, Trevor Price, Dolph Schluter, Ole Seehausen, Clifford J. Tabin, John N. Thompson, and David B. Wake.


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