The past 25 years have witnessed a revolution in the way ecologists and evolutionary biologists approach their disciplines. Modern molecular techniques are now reshaping the spectrum of questions that can be addressed while studying the mechanisms and consequences of the ecology and evolution of liv
Molecular Approaches to Ecology and Evolution
โ Scribed by Michael S. Webster, David F. Westneat (auth.), Dr. Rob DeSalle, Dr. Bernd Schierwater (eds.)
- Publisher
- Birkhรคuser Basel
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 370
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Four years ago we edited a volume of 36 papers entitled Molecular Approaches to Ecology and Evolution (Schierwater et ai. , 1994), in which we attempted to put toยญ gether a diverse array of papers that demonstrated the impact that the technologiยญ cal revolution ofmolecular biology has had on the field ofevolutionary biologyand ecology. The present volume borrows from that theme but attempts to focus more sharply on the impact that molecular biology has had on our understanding of difยญ ferent hierarchical levels important in evolutionary and ecological studies. Because DNA sequence variation is at the heart ofeverypaper in the present volume, we feel it necessary to examine how DNA has affected study at various levels of biological organization. The majority of the chapters in the present volume follow themes esยญ tablished in the earlier volume; all chapters by authors in the previous volume are either fully updated or entirely new and expand into areas that we felt were imporยญ tant for a more complete understanding of the impact of DNA technology on ecolยญ ogy and evolution. The collection of papers in this volume cover a diverse array of ecological and evolutionary questions and demonstrates the breadth of coverage molecular techยญ nology has imparted on modern evolutionary biology. There are also a broad range of hierarchical questions approached by the 17 papers in this volume.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XV
Front Matter....Pages 1-5
The use of molecular markers to study kinship in birds: techniques and questions....Pages 7-35
A role for molecular biology in testing ideas about cryptic female choice....Pages 37-53
Molecular measures of insect fitness....Pages 55-69
The use of microsatellites for genetic analysis of natural populations โ a critical review....Pages 71-86
Caution before claim: an overview of microsatellite analysis in ecology and evolutionary biology....Pages 87-106
Arbitrary oligonucleotides: primers for amplification and direct identification of nucleic acids, genes and organisms....Pages 107-123
Front Matter....Pages 125-129
The role of molecular genetics in speciation studies....Pages 131-156
Testing speciation models with DNA sequence data....Pages 157-175
PCR assays of variable nucleotide sites for identification of conservation units: n example from Caiman ....Pages 177-190
Extinction and the evolutionary process in endangered species: What to conserve?....Pages 191-210
Quantitative trait loci: a new approach to old evolutionary problems....Pages 211-220
Seeking the genetic basis of phenotypic differences among bacterial species....Pages 221-235
Front Matter....Pages 237-242
Alignment characters, dynamic programming and heuristic solutions....Pages 243-251
Pitfalls in phylogenetic analysis of large molecular data sets....Pages 253-274
The comparison of morphological and molecular data in phylogenetic systematics....Pages 275-296
Beyond area relationships: Extinction and recolonization in molecular marine biogeography....Pages 297-321
The history of development through the evolution of molecules: gene trees, hearts, eyes and dorsoventral inversion....Pages 323-355
Back Matter....Pages 359-364
โฆ Subjects
Life Sciences, general; Biomedicine general
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