Preface
Part I: History
1: Stewart H. Berlocher: Origins: A Brief History of Research on
Speciation
Part II: Species Concepts
2: Richard G. Harrison: Linking Evolutionary Pattern and Process:
The Relevance of Species Concepts for the Study of Speciation
3: Alan R. Templeton: Species and Speciation: Geography, Population
Structure, Ecology, and Gene Trees
4: Kerry L. Shaw: Species and the Diversity of Natural Groups
5: Kevin de Queiroz: The General Lineage Concept of Species,
Species Criteria, and the Process of Speciation: A Conceptual
Unification and Terminological Recommendations
Part III: Geography, Ecology, and Population Structure
6: Paul A. Johnson and Urban Gullberg: Theory and Models of
Sympatric Speciation
7: Alexey S. Kondrashov, Lev Yu. Yampolsky, and Svetlana A.
Shabalina: On the Sympatric Origin of Species by Means of Natural
Selection
8: Steward H. Berlocher: Can Symatric Speciation via Host of
Habitat Shift be Proven from Phylogenetic and Biogeographic
Evidence?
9: Dolph Schluter: Ecological Causes of Speciation
10: Jeffrey L. Feder: The Apple Maggot Fly, Rhagoletis Pomonella:
Flies in the Face of Conventional Wisdom about Speciation
11: Steph B. J. Menkin and P. Roessignh: Evolution of Insect-Plant
Associations: Sensory Perception and Receptor Modifications Direct
Food Specialization and Host Shifts in Phytophagous Insects
12: Mark R. Macnair and Mike Gardner: The Evolution of Edaphic
Endemics
13: Amy R. McCune and Nathan R. Lovejoy: The Relative Rate of
Sympatric and Allopatric Speciation in Fishes: Tests Using DNA
Sequence Divergence between Sister Species and among Clades
14: H.A. Lessios: The First Stage of Speciation as Seen in
Organisms Separated by the Isthmus of Panama
15: James L. Patton and Maria Nazareth F. da Silva: Rivers,
Refuges, and Ridges: The Geography of Speciation of Amazonian
Mammals
Part IV: Reproductive Barriers
16: Marta Martinez Wells and Charles S. Henry: Songs, Preproductive
Isolation, and Speciation in Cryptic Species of Insects: A Case
Study Using Green Lacewings
17: Therese Ann Markow and Gregory D. Hocutt: Reproductive
Isolation in Sonoran Desert Drosophila: Testing the Limits of the
Rules
18: John H. Werren: Wolbachia and Speciation
19: William R. Rice: Intergenomic Conflict, Interlocus Antagonistic
Coevolution, and he Evolution of Reproductive Isolation
20: Stephen R. Palumbi: Species Formation and the Evolution of
Gamete Recognition Loci
21: Daniel J. Howard, Marta Reece, Pamela G. Gregory, Jiming Chu,
Michael L. Cain: The Evolution of Barriers to Fertilization Between
Closely Related Organisms
Part V: The Genetics of Speciation
22: Michael G. Ritchie and Stephen D. F. Phillips: The Genetics of
Sexual Isolation
23: Dorothy Pashley Prowell: Sex Linkage and Speciation in
Lepidoptera
24: Franco Spirito: The Role of Chromosomal Change in
Speciation
25: Horacio Fachal Naveira and Xulio Rodriguez Maside: The Genetics
of Hybrid Male Sterility in Drosophila
26: Chung-I Wu and Hope Hollocher: Subtle is Nature: The Genetics
of Species Differentiation and Speciation
27: Sara Via and David J. Hawthorne: The Genetics of Speciation:
Promises and Prospects of Quantitative Trait Locus Mapping
Part VI: Hybrid Zones and Speciation
28: Roger Butlin: What Do Hybrid Zones in General, and the
Chorthippus parallelus Zone in Particular, Tell Us about
Speciation?
29: Machael L. Arnold and Simon K. Emms: Paradigm Lost -- Natural
Hubridization and Evolutionary Innovations
30: James Mallet, W. Owen McMillan, and Chris D. Jiggins: Mimicry
and Warning Color at the Boundary Between Races and Species
31: B. Rosemary Grant and Peter R. Grant: Hybridization and
Speciation in Darwin's Finches: The Role of Sexual Imprinting on a
Culturally Transmitted Trait
Part VII: Perspectives
32: Guy L. Bush: The Conceptual Radicalization of an Evolutionary
Biologist
33: Daniel J. Howard: Unanswered Questions and Future Directions in
the Study of Speciation
A timely review of the major recent advances in a fast moving and
important area of research. ...very useful book for researches and
graduate students who want to be abreast of the latest thinking on
the evolution of biological diversity, and it won't go amiss as
reading for senior undergraduates.
*Bulletin, 30:3 1999*
The text will benefit all those with a general interest in
behavioural ecology...
*Ethology Ecology and Evolution*
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