The Physics of Evolution

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This book provides an introduction to the significant role of physics in evolution, based on the ideas of matter and energy resource flow, organism self-copying, and ecological change. The text employs these ideas to create quantitative models for important evolutionary processes. Many fields of science and engineering have come up against the problem of complex design—when details become so numerous that computer power alone cannot make progress. Nature solved the complex-design problem using evolution, yet how it did so has been a mystery. Both laboratory experiments and computer-simulation attempts eventually stopped evolving. Something more than Darwin’s ideas of heredity, variation, and selection was needed. The solution is that there is a fourth element to evolution: ecological change. When a new variation is selected, this can change the ecology, and the new ecology can create new opportunities for even more new variations to be selected. Through this endless cycle, complexity can grow automatically. This book uses the physics of resource flow to describe this process in detail, developing quantitative models for many evolutionary processes, including selection, multicellularity, coevolution, sexual reproduction, and the Serengeti Rules. The text demonstrates that these models are in conceptual agreement with numerous examples of biological phenomena, and reveals, through physics, how complex design can arise naturally. This will serve as a key text on the part physics plays in evolution, and will be of great interest to students at the university level and above studying biophysics, physics, systems biology, and related fields.

Author(s): Michael W. Roth
Publisher: CRC Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 170
City: Boca Raton

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Preface
Chapter 1 Fundamentals
1.1 Origin
1.2 Marine Snow
1.3 Selection
1.4 Coexistence
1.5 Comments and Conclusions
Chapter 2 Fertility
2.1 Juvenile Mortality
2.2 Invasive Species
2.3 Streamlining
2.4 Early Multicellular Evolution
2.5 Evolvability
2.6 Comments and Conclusions
Chapter 3 Scavengers
3.1 Specialists
3.2 Invasive Specialists
3.3 Generalist Competition
3.4 Comments and Conclusions
Chapter 4 Predators
4.1 Overfeeding
4.2 Cannibalism
4.3 Prey Defense
4.4 Generalization
4.5 Predator-Prey Cycles
4.6 Comments and Conclusions
Chapter 5 Arms Races
5.1 Base Arms-Race Model
5.2 Predator Variation
5.3 Prey Variation
5.4 Predator Extinction
5.5 Prey Extinction
5.6 Red Queen
5.7 Evolution of Complexity
5.8 Comments and Conclusions
Chapter 6 Trophic Cascades
6.1 Trophic Cascade Model
6.2 Low-Tier Predation
6.3 Mid-Tier Predation
6.4 Apex Predator
6.5 Low-Tier Competition
6.6 Comments and Conclusions
Chapter 7 Parasites and Pathogens
7.1 Virulence
7.2 Attenuation
7.3 Resistance
7.4 Coevolution
7.5 Sexual Reproduction
7.6 Comments and Conclusions
Chapter 8 Serengeti
8.1 Migration and Residency
8.2 Grass Regulation
8.3 Wildfires
8.4 Ecosystem Model
8.5 Serengeti Rules
Chapter 9 Summary Discussion
Appendix A Density-Dependent Regulation
Appendix B Selection Theorem Proofs
References
Index