Featuring a superb selection of papers from leading authors, this book summarizes the state of current understanding about the extent of genetic variation within wild populations and the ways to monitor such variation. It is a valuable resource for professionals and graduate students in genetics, biology, ecology, and evolution.
Author(s): Timothy A. Mousseau, Barry Sinervo, John A. Endler
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2000
Language: English
Pages: 276
City: New York
Contents......Page 8
Contributors......Page 10
1. Quantitative Genetic Variation in Populations of Darwin's Finches......Page 14
2. Adaptation, Natural Selection, and Optimal Life-History Allocation in the Face of Genetically Based Trade-offs......Page 52
3. Natural Selection and the Evolution of Adaptive Genetic Variation in Northern Freshwater Fishes......Page 76
4. Understanding Natural Selection on Traits That Are Influenced by Environmental Conditions......Page 106
5. Adaptive Evolution and Neutral Variation in a Wild Leafminer Metapopulation......Page 127
6. Reaching New Adaptive Peaks: Evolution of Alternative Bill Forms in an African Finch......Page 150
7. Geographic Variation in Flower Size in Wild Radish: The Potential Role of Pollinators in Population Differentiation......Page 168
8. Detecting Inheritance with Inferred Relatedness in Nature......Page 198
9. Laboratory and Field Heritabilities: Some Lessons from Drosophila......Page 211
10. Intra- and Interpopulation Genetic Variation: Explaining the Past and Predicting the Future......Page 230
11. Adaptive Genetic Variation in the Wild......Page 262
D......Page 272
G......Page 273
H......Page 274
P......Page 275
Y......Page 276