"Fitness Landscapes and the Origin of Species" 2004, Princeton Uiversity
Press, Monographs in Population Biology vol 41. pp.476
From the cover:
The origin of species
has fascinated both biologists and the general public since the publication
of Darwin's Origin of Species in 1859. Significant progress in understanding
the process was achieved in the "modern synthesis," when Theodosius Dobzhansky,
Ernst Mayr, and others reconciled Mendelian genetics with Darwin's natural
selection. Although evolutionary biologists have developed significant new
theory and data about speciation in the years since the modern synthesis,
this book represents the first systematic attempt to summarize and generalize
what mathematical models tell us about the dynamics of speciation.
Fitness Landscapes and the Origin of Species presents both an overview
of the forty years of previous theoretical research and the author's new
results. Sergey Gavrilets uses a unified framework based on the notion of
fitness landscapes introduced by Sewall Wright in 1932, generalizing this
notion to explore the consequences of the huge dimensionality of fitness
landscapes that correspond to biological systems.
In contrast to previous theoretical work, which was based largely on
numerical simulations, Gavrilets develops simple mathematical models that
allow for analytical investigation and clear interpretation in biological
terms. Covering controversial topics, including sympatric speciation and
the effects of sexual conflict on speciation, this book builds for the
first time a general, quantitative theory for the origin of species.
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- Known typos
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proofs (please contact me directly if interested)
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