Adaptation in Metapopulations: How Interaction Changes Evolution

Adaptation in Metapopulations: How Interaction Changes Evolution

by Michael J. Wade
Adaptation in Metapopulations: How Interaction Changes Evolution

Adaptation in Metapopulations: How Interaction Changes Evolution

by Michael J. Wade

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Overview

All organisms live in clusters, but such fractured local populations, or demes, nonetheless maintain connectivity with one another by some amount of gene flow between them. Most such metapopulations occur naturally, like clusters of amphibians in vernal ponds or baboon troops spread across the African veldt. Others have been created as human activities fragment natural landscapes, as in stands of trees separated by roads. As landscape change has accelerated, understanding how these metapopulations function—and specifically how they adapt—has become crucial to ecology and to our very understanding of evolution itself.

With Adaptation in Metapopulations, Michael J. Wade explores a key component of this new understanding of evolution: interaction. Synthesizing decades of work in the lab and in the field in a book both empirically grounded and underpinned by a strong conceptual framework, Wade looks at the role of interaction across scales from gene selection to selection at the level of individuals, kin, and groups. In so doing, he integrates molecular and organismal biology to reveal the true complexities of evolutionary dynamics from genes to metapopulations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226129563
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 05/03/2016
Series: Interspecific Interactions Series
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Michael J. Wade is distinguished professor of biology at Indiana University, Bloomington. He is coauthor of Mating Systems and Strategies.

Table of Contents

1 Introduction
2 What Is Group Selection?
3 Group Selection in the 1970s
4 Career Beginnings and Science after the Thesis
5 Experimental Studies of Population Heritability
6 Population Ecology and Population Heritability
7 The Evolution of Sociality
8 Calibrating the Laboratory to Nature
9 Experimental Studies of Wright’s Shifting Balance Theory
10 Beyond the Shifting Balancing Theory

Acknowledgments
Reference List
Index
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