Despite a long history of examining the geographic context of speciation, differences in geographic range have rarely been considered a legitimate isolating mechanism. This likely results from the complex relationship between historical and ecological processes in determining the spatial distribution of species. Ecogeographic isolation is the proportion of geographic isolation that results from genetically based ecological differences between taxa and should therefore be measured as an isolating mechanism under the biological species concept. In this study, species distribution modeling was used to evaluate the potential ranges of 12 recently diverged pairs of species in the genus Mimulus. Variation in the distribution models showed that th...
Speciation is the process by which reproductive isolation evolves between populations. Two general m...
Aim: Understanding the relative roles of geography and ecology in driving speciation, population div...
Aim: In island-like habitats, geographic isolation facilitates population and species divergence by ...
Despite a long history of examining the geographic context of speciation, differences in geographic ...
Many forms of reproductive isolation contribute to speciation, and early acting barriers may be espe...
Determining which forms of reproductive isolation have the biggest impact on the process of divergen...
Closely related species (e.g., sister taxa) often occupy very different ecological niches and can ex...
Ecological adaptation is the driving force during divergence-with-gene-flow and generates reproducti...
The mechanisms by which species are formed is a central question in evolutionary biology.\ud The Bio...
Inferring the geographic mode of speciation could help reveal the evolutionary and ecological mechan...
31 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Biology and the Clark Honors College of the Univer...
Understanding the relative roles of intrinsic and extrinsic reproductive barriers, and their interpl...
Incompletely isolated species provide an opportunity to investigate the genetic mechanisms and evolu...
BACKGROUND: In the mid 20th Century, Ernst Mayr and Theodosius Dobzhansky championed the significanc...
Speciation is the process by which reproductive isolation evolves between populations. Two general m...
Aim: Understanding the relative roles of geography and ecology in driving speciation, population div...
Aim: In island-like habitats, geographic isolation facilitates population and species divergence by ...
Despite a long history of examining the geographic context of speciation, differences in geographic ...
Many forms of reproductive isolation contribute to speciation, and early acting barriers may be espe...
Determining which forms of reproductive isolation have the biggest impact on the process of divergen...
Closely related species (e.g., sister taxa) often occupy very different ecological niches and can ex...
Ecological adaptation is the driving force during divergence-with-gene-flow and generates reproducti...
The mechanisms by which species are formed is a central question in evolutionary biology.\ud The Bio...
Inferring the geographic mode of speciation could help reveal the evolutionary and ecological mechan...
31 pages. A thesis presented to the Department of Biology and the Clark Honors College of the Univer...
Understanding the relative roles of intrinsic and extrinsic reproductive barriers, and their interpl...
Incompletely isolated species provide an opportunity to investigate the genetic mechanisms and evolu...
BACKGROUND: In the mid 20th Century, Ernst Mayr and Theodosius Dobzhansky championed the significanc...
Speciation is the process by which reproductive isolation evolves between populations. Two general m...
Aim: Understanding the relative roles of geography and ecology in driving speciation, population div...
Aim: In island-like habitats, geographic isolation facilitates population and species divergence by ...