Natural Selection in the WildPrinceton University Press, 21 Nis 1986 - 336 sayfa Natural selection is an immense and important subject, yet there have been few attempts to summarize its effects on natural populations, and fewer still which discuss the problems of working with natural selection in the wild. These are the purposes of John Endler's book. In it, he discusses the methods and problems involved in the demonstration and measurement of natural selection, presents the critical evidence for its existence, and places it in an evolutionary perspective. |
İçindekiler
Introduction | 3 |
11 Definition of Natural Selection | 4 |
12 Relationship to Genetic Drift and Evolution | 5 |
13 Restricted Meanings of Natural Selection | 8 |
14 Modes of Selection | 15 |
15 Summary | 26 |
Philosophical Comments | 27 |
21 Natural Selection and Tautology | 28 |
43 Reasons for Misleading Detection of Selection | 115 |
44 Summary | 125 |
Direct Demonstrations of Natural Selection in the Wild | 126 |
51 Characteristics of Demonstrative Studies | 127 |
52 Observations on the Distribution of Kinds of Traits Selected | 154 |
53 Observations on the Distribution of Modes of Selection | 160 |
54 General Comments on Detecting Natural Selection | 162 |
55 Summary | 165 |
22 Force Action and Intensity | 29 |
23 Fitness and Adaptation | 33 |
24 Two More Useful Distinctions | 50 |
25 Summary | 51 |
Methods for the Detection of Natural Selection in the Wild | 52 |
Correlation with Environmental Factors | 56 |
Comparisons between Closely Related Sympatric Species | 59 |
Comparisons between Unrelated Species Living in Similar Habitats | 62 |
Deviation from Formal Null Models | 64 |
LongTerm Studies of Trait Frequency Distributions | 73 |
Perturbation of Natural Populations | 75 |
Genetic Demography or Cohort Analysis | 81 |
Comparisons among Age Classes or LifeHistory Stages | 82 |
Predictions about Natural Selection | 86 |
Nonequilibrium Predictions of Changes in Trait Frequency Distributions | 88 |
Equilibrium Predictions about Trait Frequency Distributions | 91 |
312 How to Detect Natural Selection in the Wild | 93 |
313 Summary | 96 |
Problems in Detecting Natural Selection | 97 |
41 Reasons for Lack of Detection of Natural Selection When It Exists | 98 |
42 Reasons for Apparent Detection of Selection When It Is Nonexistent | 107 |
Estimating Selection Coefficients and Differentials | 167 |
61 Introduction to the Methods | 168 |
62 Direct Univariate Methods | 171 |
63 Univariate Mean Fitness Methods | 176 |
64 Multivariate Methods | 179 |
65 The Use of Selection Coefficients and Differentials | 199 |
66 Summary | 201 |
Distribution of Selection Coefficients and Differentials in Natural Populations | 203 |
72 Observed Distributions | 207 |
73 A Comparison of Observed and Expected Distributions | 215 |
74 Summary | 222 |
The Importance of Natural Selection | 224 |
82 Origin and Replacement | 240 |
Natural Selection and Evolution | 245 |
84 Summary | 248 |
Multiple Regression and the Estimation of Selection Differentials | 251 |
Comparisons Between Selection Differentials and Regression Coefficients Using Simulated Data of Selection with Known Properties | 260 |
References | 273 |
325 | |
328 | |