Variation

Key Features

  • Provides an overview of current thinking on variation in evolutionary biology, functional morphology, and evolutionary developmental biology
  • Written by a team of leading scholars specializing on the study of variation
  • Reviews of statistical analysis of variation by leading authorities
  • Key chapters focus on the role of the study of phenotypic variation for evolutionary, developmental, and post-genomic biology

Description

Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection was based on the observation that there is variation between individuals within the same species. This fundamental observation is a central concept in evolutionary biology. However, variation is only rarely treated directly. It has remained peripheral to the study of mechanisms of evolutionary change. The explosion of knowledge in genetics, developmental biology, and the ongoing synthesis of evolutionary and developmental biology has made it possible for us to study the factors that limit, enhance, or structure variation at the level of an animals' physical appearance and behavior. Knowledge of the significance of variability is crucial to this emerging synthesis. Variation situates the role of variability within this broad framework, bringing variation back to the center of the evolutionary stage.

Additional details

  • Published: 2005
  • Imprint: Academic Press
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 978-0-12-088777-4
  • DOI: 10.1016/B978-0-12-088777-4.X5000-5

Actions for selected chapters

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CHAPTER 1 - Variation and Variability

Benedikt Hallgrímsson and Brian K. Hall

Pages 1-7

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CHAPTER 4 - Landmark Morphometrics and the Analysis of Variation

Joan T. Richtsmeier, Subhash R. Lele and Theodore M. Cole

Pages 49-69

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CHAPTER 5 - Variation in Ontogeny

Donna Carlson Jones and Rebecca Z. German

Pages 71-85

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CHAPTER 9 - Mutation and Phenotypic Variation

Ary A. Hoffmann and John A. McKenzie

Pages 159-189

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CHAPTER 10 - Within Individual Variation

Katherine E. Willmore and Benedikt Hallgrímsson

Pages 191-218

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CHAPTER 13 - Role of Stress in Evolution

Alexander V. Badyaev

Pages 277-302

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CHAPTER 14 - Environmentally Contingent Variation

Sonia E. Sultan and Stephen C. Stearns

Pages 303-332

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CHAPTER 16 - Antisymmetry

A. Richard Palmer

Pages 359-XXIV

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CHAPTER 17 - Variation in Structure and Its Relationship to Function

Anthony P. Russell and Aaron M. Bauer

Pages 399-434

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CHAPTER 21 - Phenogenetics

Samuel Sholtis and Kenneth M. Weiss

Pages 499-523

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CHAPTER 22 - The Study of Phenotypic Variability

Benedikt Hallgrímsson, Jevon James Yardley Brown and Brian K. Hall

Pages 525-551

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Benedikt Hallgrímsson

Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, Joint Injury and Arthritis Research Group, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Brian K. Hall

Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada