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Showing papers in "The Quarterly Review of Biology in 1989"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: If ecological causation for dimorphism can be demonstrated in so many cases, despite the inadequacies of the available criteria, the degree of sexual sizeDimorphism in many other animal species may well also have been influenced by ecological factors, and it may be premature of dismiss this hypothesis.
Abstract: Can sexual dimorphism evolve because of ecological differences between the sexes? Although several examples of this phenomenon are well known from studies on birds, the idea has often been dismissed as lacking general applicability. This dismissal does not stem from contradictory data so much as from the difficulties inherent in testing the hypothesis, and its apparent lack of parsimony, in comparison to the alternative explanation of sexual selection. The only unequivocal evidence for the evolution of sexual dimorphism through intersexual niche partitioning would be disproportionate dimorphism in trophic structures (e.g., mouthparts). This criterion offers a minimum estimate of the importance of ecological causes for dimorphism, because it may fail to identify most cases. A review of published literature reveals examples of sexually dimorphic trophic structures in most animal phyla. Many of these examples seem to be attributable to sexual selection, but others reflect adaptations for niche divergence between the sexes. For example, dwarf non-feeding males without functional mouthparts have evolved independently in many taxa. In other cases, males and females differ in trophic structures apparently because of differences in diets. Such divergence may often reflect specific nutritional requirements for reproduction in females, or extreme (sexually selected?) differences between males and females in habitats or body sizes. Ecological competition between the sexes may be responsible for intersexual niche divergence in some cases, but the independent evolution of foraging specializations by each sex may be of more general importance. If ecological causation for dimorphism can be demonstrated in so many cases, despite the inadequacies of the available criteria, the degree of sexual size dimorphism in many other animal species may well also have been influenced by ecological factors. Hence, it may be premature to dismiss this hypothesis, despite the difficulty of testing it.

1,312 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work maintains that the usual outcome-the greatest number of species at intermediate levels of disturbance-can be explained by assuming that there are trade-offs in species-specific abilities that place constraints on immigration to, and extinction in, patches, and develops graphical models for equilibrium and nonequilibrium situations.
Abstract: Hypotheses that relate disturbance to the production and maintenance of species diversity are reviewed. The hypotheses have been classified traditionally by the effect of the disturbance on the community: Those that involve selective mortality, which maintains the species diversity of a community in equilibrium, and those that invoke causing random, localized, mass mortality, which prevent the community from reaching and equilibrium. Regardless of this difference, most hypotheses predict that the greatest number of species will occur at intermediate leves of disturbance. We develop graphical models for equilibrium and nonequilibrium situations, which we show to differ only in respect to temporal and spatial scale. We maintain that the usual outcome-the greatest number of species at intermediate levels of disturbance-can be explained by assuming that there are trade-offs in species-specific abilities that place constraints on immigration to, and extinction in, patches. Changes in immigration and extinction...

684 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Computer alignment of all these sequences allows an overall phylogeny to be constructed that chronicles the history of events leading to infectious retroviruses.
Abstract: As is the case for some other RNA viruses, the amino acid sequences of retroviral proteins change at an astonishing rate. For example, the proteases of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and the visna lentivirus with which it is often compared are as different as the proteases of fungi and mammals, and those of the human type I leukemia virus are as different from HIV or visna as are the proteins of humans and bacteria. That the sequences of retrovirus proteins can be recognized as sharing common ancestry with non-retroviral proteins implies that the vastly accelerated change has begun only recently or occurs very sporadically. Only a scheme whereby exogenous retroviruses exist as short-lived bursts upon a backdrop of germline-encoded endogenous viruses is consistent with the sequence data. Retroviruses are related to many other reverse transcriptase-bearing entities present in the genomes of eukaryotes. They also have proteins that are homologous with those of some plant and animal DNA viruses, and t...

529 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review will focus on problems at the cellular level of iron acquisition, storage, and exclusion; and the strategies devised by cells of plants, microorganisms, and animals to solve these problems.
Abstract: Cells of plants, most microorganisms, and animals require well-defined amounts of iron for survival, replication, and differentiation. The metal is an important component of such processes as synthesis of DNA, RNA, and chlorophyll; electron transport; oxygen metabolism; and nitrogen fixation. Because of the insolubility of iron in aerobic environments at neutral and alkaline pH values, cells have had to devise specific strategies to assimilate the metal. These include (1) development of systems for reducing ferric ions to the more soluble ferrous ions at the cell surface, (2) employment of small carrier molecules (termed siderophores) that have high affinity for ferric ions and receptor proteins for the ferrated molecules, and (3) use of transferrin and other proteins that can transport ferric ions. Excessive amounts of iron are toxic, however, and intracellular storage capacity is limited and efflux mechanisms generally are lacking. Thus, cells have had to develop methods of preventing over-accumulation of the metal. These include use of (1) oxygen to convert ferrous to ferric ions, (2) small molecules that can bind ferrous ions, termed siderophraxes, and (3) proteins that, when combined with ferrous ions, repress the expression of iron transport genes. Often, one organism can prevent growth of neighbors by restricting their access to iron. In other cases, cells assist each other by sharing iron acquisition systems or by restricting influx of excess iron. Homeostatic control of other essential trace metals also is required for optimal cell function. Nevertheless, since iron thus far has received most attention, it serves as the model of mineral metabolism. Moreover, many of the observations made on control of iron metabolism suggest possible applications in prevention and management of plant and animal infections as well as of neoplastic diseases, arthropathy, and cardiomyopathy. This review will focus on (1) problems at the cellular level of iron acquisition, storage, and exclusion; and (2) the strategies devised by cells of plants, microorganisms, and animals to solve these problems.

119 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that insects would been unable to exploit the potential of holometaboly and flight without the capacity to ensure egg survival in the wide range of oviposition substrates provided by terrestrial environments.
Abstract: Among the many hypotheses proposed to account for the unparalleled diversification of the Insecta, attributes of the egg stage have been largerly overlooked. Comparison with the Parainsecta (Collem...

117 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: DNA hybridization is a "distance method" for phylogenetic reconstruction and, as such, shares a set of assumptions, advantages, and problems with other techniques that do not directly employ character data.
Abstract: DNA hybridization is a "distance method" for phylogenetic reconstruction and, as such, shares a set of assumptions, advantages, and problems with other techniques that do not directly employ character data. The technique purports to measure the average percent mismatch of homologous nucleotide sequences between the single-copy genomes of species. This measurement, as any other, is subject to considerations of accuracy and precision. While replicate measurements and technical modifications can improve precision, the accuracy of such measurements is limited by the equivalence of genomes under comparison. Such routine events in genome evolution as gene duplication and deletion may complicate the interpretation of DNA hybridization distances. Beyond measurement limitations, the most serious potential distortions of distances are due to biased sequence sampling and homoplasy. These problems, however, do not necessarily preclude phylogenetic reconstruction, and their effects may be mitigated by numerical corrections. Homoplasy, in particular, is a difficulty faced by all methods of phylogenetic inference. If such distortions can be eliminated, mitigated by correction, or shown to be trivial, pairwise tree-construction strategies should provide reliable estimates of phylogeny.

69 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Chaos theory is a branch of mathematics focusing on the behavior of dynamical systems that are highly sensitive to initial conditions, and Chaos and Fractals is an interdisciplinary study of these systems.
Abstract: Mon, 10 Dec 2018 12:00:00 GMT chaos making a new science pdf Buy Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science on Amazon.com FREE SHIPPING on qualified orders Sun, 09 Dec 2018 15:15:00 GMT Chaos and Fractals: New Frontiers of Science: Heinz-Otto ... Chaos theory is a branch of mathematics focusing on the behavior of dynamical systems that are highly sensitive to initial conditions. "Chaos" is an interdisciplinary ... Mon, 10 Dec 2018 08:18:00 GMT Chaos theory Wikipedia Mythology, philosophy, and religion. Chaos (cosmogony), the first being in Greek mythology; the word is often used in comparative mythology; Chaos magic, a branch of ... Mon, 10 Dec 2018 06:10:00 GMT Chaos Wikipedia 3 people in an organization. 20. We are making up and discovering the new forms of organizations for the 21st century. Leadership and the New Science is highly ... Sat, 08 Dec 2018 06:12:00 GMT Key Points from Leadership and the New Science by Margaret ... CHAPTER I ORGANIZING CHAOS THE conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic ... Thu, 06 Dec 2018 17:20:00 GMT Propaganda by Edward Bernays (1928) Since I wrote my book on the topic, people have been asking me “whatâ€TMs new in threat modeling?― My Blackhat talk is my answer to that question, and itâ€TMs been ... Sat, 08 Dec 2018 19:05:00 GMT Emergent Chaos | The Emergent Chaos Jazz Combo Eyal is a technology leader and security researcher at Check Point. During the past six years, Eyal has been doing application and malware research developing new ... Fri, 07 Dec 2018 01:13:00 GMT Conference Program / 29th Annual FIRST Conference Study.com is an education company dedicated to making education accessible and helping students lower the cost of their higher education. They've just launched a ... Sat, 29 Mar 2014 11:14:00 GMT Kids Creative Chaos Exploring gut microbes in human health and disease: Pushing the envelope Mon, 10 Dec 2018 12:15:00 GMT Exploring gut microbes in human health and disease ... New English course lineup gives students broader literary exposure. Core courses in English now include four seminars designed “to offer the best and the most ... Thu, 06 Dec 2018 10:32:00 GMT YaleNews | Home HEBREW BIBLE, TABLE OF CONTENTS 2 2 HTIntroduction to the Poetical and Wisdom Books TH …….………. 958 HTJob TH ... Sun, 09 Dec 2018 07:08:00 GMT The Bible New Revised Standard Version Osmar R. Zaà ̄ane, 1999 CMPUT690 Principles of Knowledge Discovery in Databases University of Alberta page 1 Department of Computing Science Introduction to Data Mining exinfm Joining Humanity+ as a Full, Plus or Sponsor Member enables you to participate in Humanity+ governance and decision-making an important role in the growing ... Original Magazine Issues h+ Mediah+ Media -

28 citations









Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The "citation classics" identified as ecological do not provide a clear guide to all aspects of ecology, nor to all leading ecologists in the three decades covered, but they do identify a broad compass of recent concerns of ecologists and of notable contributors to ecology.
Abstract: Identification of the most significant contributions, or classics, in the literature of a scientific discipline is difficult. Recent computer-based citation statistics make it possible to identify frequently cited articles published from 1947 to 1977 and designated "citation classics" between 1977 and 1986. These are reviewed to determine what may be learned about authors, institutions, journals publishing frequently cited ecological articles, and about the taxa, habitats and ecological topics represented in them. A comparison is made with other sources that identify articles of unusual interest. The "citation classics" identified as ecological do not provide a clear guide to all aspects of ecology, nor to all leading ecologists in the three decades covered. Nevertheless, they do identify a broad compass of recent concerns of ecologists and of notable contributors to ecology. Published reminiscences of authors concerning these publications also provide insights into motivations, stimuli, and problems in t...



Journal ArticleDOI
Bruce Wallace1
TL;DR: The role of selection (expressed as the average number of adult daughters per female) on gene frequencies in populations has been partitioned into population and time arenas.
Abstract: Following introductory comments expressing doubts about the validity of genetic load and Haldane's "cost of natural selection," the role of selection (expressed as the average number of adult daughters per female) on gene frequencies in populations has been partitioned into population and time arenas. The population arena (a geometric plane) deals with the fitnesses of different genotypes under the many situations encountered by individual members of the population in a single generation; average fitnesses of carriers of various genotypes are obtained by calculating across these many situations. The population arena includes the point signifying that, on the average, each mother leaves one daughter as her replacement within the population. It is the plane within which evolutionarily significant norms of reaction exist. The time arena is also a (geometric) plane, one that is composed of the edge-on limit (average fitness) of each successive population arena. It does not include the effects of individual situations on relative fitnesses within each population arena; it encompasses only the temporal sequence of average relative fitnesses. Amino acid substitutions in proteins and base-pair substitutions in DNA are events of concern in the time arena; within the population arena, however, gene action (not merely gene structure) is a matter of considerable concern. Thus, the discussions of the 1950s and 1960s regarding genetic variation which were reasonable within the population arena seem less so within the time arena where structural, rather than functional, variation is stressed. The function-structure dichotomy is entangled with the neutralist-selectionist controversy.