Evolution and Ecology of Species Range Limits
暂无分享,去创建一个
Patrick J. McIntyre | Amy L. Angert | Kevin J. Rice | Jason P Sexton | P. McIntyre | A. Angert | K. Rice | Jason P. Sexton
[1] J. W. Valentine,et al. A macroevolutionary perspective on species range limits , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[2] W. J. Kennington,et al. Testing limits to adaptation along altitudinal gradients in rainforest Drosophila , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[3] Robert D Holt,et al. Trophic interactions and range limits: the diverse roles of predation , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[4] M. Kirkpatrick,et al. Evolutionarily stable range limits set by interspecific competition , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[5] K. Gaston. Geographic range limits: achieving synthesis , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[6] M. Kearney,et al. Mechanistic niche modelling: combining physiological and spatial data to predict species' ranges. , 2009, Ecology letters.
[7] D. Purves. The demography of range boundaries versus range cores in eastern US tree species , 2009, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[8] D. Reznick,et al. Evolution of Placentas in the Fish Family Poeciliidae: An Empirical Study of Macroevolution , 2009 .
[9] G. Mittelbach,et al. Is There a Latitudinal Gradient in the Importance of Biotic Interactions , 2009 .
[10] B. Willis,et al. Systematic and Biogeographical Patterns in the Reproductive Biology of Scleractinian Corals , 2009 .
[11] K. Kay,et al. The Role of Animal Pollination in Plant Speciation: Integrating Ecology, Geography, and Genetics , 2009 .
[12] T. Kawecki. Adaptation to Marginal Habitats , 2008 .
[13] D. Schemske,et al. Using Experimental Evolution to Investigate Geographic Range Limits in Monkeyflowers , 2008, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[14] Benoit Pujol,et al. Reduced Responses to Selection After Species Range Expansion , 2008, Science.
[15] Environmental parameters that determine species geographical range limits as a matter of time and space , 2008 .
[16] Robert D Holt,et al. The Relation of Density Regulation to Habitat Specialization, Evolution of a Species’ Range, and the Dynamics of Biological Invasions , 2008, The American Naturalist.
[17] D. Ackerly,et al. Climate Change and the Future of California's Endemic Flora , 2008, PloS one.
[18] Flemming Skov,et al. Postglacial dispersal limitation of widespread forest plant species in nemoral Europe , 2008 .
[19] E. Darling,et al. Increased seed dispersal potential towards geographic range limits in a Pacific coast dune plant. , 2008, The New phytologist.
[20] C. Eckert,et al. Genetic variation across species’ geographical ranges: the central–marginal hypothesis and beyond , 2008, Molecular ecology.
[21] Antoine Guisan,et al. Niche dynamics in space and time. , 2008, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[22] W. Bradshaw,et al. Genetic response to rapid climate change: it's seasonal timing that matters , 2008, Molecular ecology.
[23] Lauren B. Buckley,et al. Linking Traits to Energetics and Population Dynamics to Predict Lizard Ranges in Changing Environments , 2007, The American Naturalist.
[24] S. Jackson,et al. Novel climates, no‐analog communities, and ecological surprises , 2007 .
[25] C. Meynard,et al. Predicting species distributions: a critical comparison of the most common statistical models using artificial species , 2007 .
[26] B. Loiselle,et al. Limits to elevational distributions in two species of emberizine finches: disentangling the role of interspecific competition, autoecology, and geographic variation in the environment , 2007 .
[27] K. Drinkwater,et al. Ocean climate effects on the relative abundance of short-finned (Illex illecebrosus) and long-finned (Loligo pealeii) squid in the northwest Atlantic Ocean , 2007 .
[28] R. Lande,et al. Species’ Borders and Dispersal Barriers , 2007, The American Naturalist.
[29] E. Leger,et al. Assessing the speed and predictability of local adaptation in invasive California poppies (Eschscholzia californica) , 2007, Journal of evolutionary biology.
[30] Ran Nathan,et al. Over the (range) edge: a 45‐year transplant experiment with the perennial forest herb Hyacinthoides non‐scripta , 2007 .
[31] J. Bridle,et al. Limits to evolution at range margins: when and why does adaptation fail? , 2007, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[32] M. Edwards,et al. Effects of ocean temperature on the southern range limits of two understory kelps, Pterygophora californica and Eisenia arborea, at multiple life-stages , 2007 .
[33] C. Nowak,et al. Intraspecific range dynamics and niche evolution in Candidula land snail species , 2007 .
[34] D. Adams,et al. Bioclimatic modelling, morphology, and behaviour reveal alternative mechanisms regulating the distributions of two parapatric salamander species , 2007 .
[35] R. Andrews,et al. Incubation temperature and phenotypic traits of Sceloporus undulatus: implications for the northern limits of distribution , 2007, Oecologia.
[36] C. Parmesan. Ecological and Evolutionary Responses to Recent Climate Change , 2006 .
[37] Jingyun Fang,et al. Climatic limits for the present distribution of beech (Fagus L.) species in the world , 2006 .
[38] Tom Celebrezze,et al. Alien Species and Evolution: The Evolutionary Ecology of Exotic Plants, Animals, Microbes, and Interacting Native Species , 2006 .
[39] M. Pigliucci,et al. Jack of all trades, master of some? On the role of phenotypic plasticity in plant invasions. , 2006, Ecology letters.
[40] R. Lande,et al. ECOLOGICAL AND REPRODUCTIVE CHARACTER DISPLACEMENT OF AN ENVIRONMENTAL GRADIENT , 2006, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[41] Greg Dwyer,et al. Combining Population‐Dynamic and Ecophysiological Models to Predict Climate‐Induced Insect Range Shifts , 2006, The American Naturalist.
[42] A. Lotter,et al. Holocene expansions of Fagus silvatica and Abies alba in Central Europe: where are we after eight decades of debate? , 2006 .
[43] Richard Shine,et al. Invasion and the evolution of speed in toads , 2006, Nature.
[44] S. Gilman,et al. Life at the edge: an experimental study of a poleward range boundary , 2006, Oecologia.
[45] I. Pen,et al. Geographical patterns of adaptation within a species’ range: interactions between drift and gene flow , 2006, Journal of evolutionary biology.
[46] M. Watson,et al. Is Evolution Necessary for Range Expansion? Manipulating Reproductive Timing of a Weedy Annual Transplanted beyond Its Range , 2005, The American Naturalist.
[47] G. Ruiz,et al. BIOTIC RESISTANCE TO INVASION: NATIVE PREDATOR LIMITS ABUNDANCE AND DISTRIBUTION OF AN INTRODUCED CRAB , 2005 .
[48] J. Malcolm,et al. Northern range boundary dynamics of southern flying squirrels: evidence of an energetic bottleneck , 2005 .
[49] M. Araújo,et al. Equilibrium of species’ distributions with climate , 2005 .
[50] D. Schemske,et al. THE EVOLUTION OF SPECIES' DISTRIBUTIONS: RECIPROCAL TRANSPLANTS ACROSS THE ELEVATION RANGES OF MIMULUS CARDINALIS AND M. LEWISII , 2005, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[51] R. Petit,et al. Conserving biodiversity under climate change: the rear edge matters. , 2005, Ecology letters.
[52] D. Maehr,et al. Alien Species and Evolution: The Evolutionary Ecology of Exotic Plants, Animals, Microbes and Interacting Native Species (review) , 2005 .
[53] M. Edwards,et al. Delayed recovery of giant kelp near its southern range limit in the North Pacific following El Niño , 2005 .
[54] Michael S. Gaines,et al. Analysis of adaptation in heterogeneous landscapes: Implications for the evolution of fundamental niches , 1992, Evolutionary Ecology.
[55] M. McPeek,et al. The community context of species' borders: ecological and evolutionary perspectives , 2005 .
[56] Mark L. Taper,et al. Theoretical models of species' borders: single species approaches , 2005 .
[57] V. Eckhart,et al. EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF ADAPTATION IN CLARKIA XANTIANA. II. FITNESS VARIATION ACROSS A SUBSPECIES BORDER , 2005 .
[58] M. Vilà,et al. LOSS OF ENEMY RESISTANCE AMONG INTRODUCED POPULATIONS OF ST. JOHN'S WORT (HYPERICUM PERFORATUM) , 2004 .
[59] M. Kellman. Sugar maple (Acer saccharum Marsh.) establishment in boreal forest: results of a transplantation experiment , 2004 .
[60] Julie R. Etterson,et al. EVOLUTIONARY POTENTIAL OF CHAMAECRISTA FASCICULATA IN RELATION TO CLIMATE CHANGE. II. GENETIC ARCHITECTURE OF THREE POPULATIONS RECIPROCALLY PLANTED ALONG AN ENVIRONMENTAL GRADIENT IN THE GREAT PLAINS , 2004, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[61] R. Gomulkiewicz,et al. Temporal Variation Can Facilitate Niche Evolution in Harsh Sink Environments , 2004, The American Naturalist.
[62] M. Vilà,et al. RAPID EVOLUTION OF AN INVASIVE PLANT , 2004 .
[63] R. N. Mack,et al. Ecological genetics of Bromus tectorum , 1991, Oecologia.
[64] R. N. Mack,et al. Ecological genetics of Bromus tectorum , 1991, Oecologia.
[65] Richard N. Mack,et al. The population biology of Bromus tectorum in forests: distinguishing the opportunity for dispersal from environmental restriction , 1990, Oecologia.
[66] S. Sultan,et al. Promising directions in plant phenotypic plasticity , 2004 .
[67] R. Briers. Range limits and parasite prevalence in a freshwater snail , 2003, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[68] T. Bataillon. Shaking the 'deleterious mutations' dogma? , 2003 .
[69] D. Ackerly. Community Assembly, Niche Conservatism, and Adaptive Evolution in Changing Environments , 2003, International Journal of Plant Sciences.
[70] M. Kirkpatrick,et al. GENE FLOW AND THE COEVOLUTION OF PARASITE RANGE , 2003, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[71] R. Gomulkiewicz,et al. The phenomenology of niche evolution via quantitative traits in a ‘black-hole’ sink , 2003, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[72] Robert D. Holt,et al. On the evolutionary ecology of species' ranges , 2003 .
[73] Kevin J. Gaston,et al. The structure and dynamics of geographic ranges , 2003 .
[74] K. Crandall,et al. Beyond FST: Analysis of population genetic data for conservation , 2003, Conservation Genetics.
[75] Justin M. J. Travis,et al. Dispersal evolution during invasions , 2002 .
[76] D. Wethey. Biogeography, Competition, and Microclimate: The Barnacle Chthamalus fragilis in New England1 , 2002, Integrative and comparative biology.
[77] C. Lee. Evolutionary genetics of invasive species , 2002 .
[78] S. Gaines,et al. The ‘abundant centre’ distribution: to what extent is it a biogeographical rule? , 2002 .
[79] J. Stewart,et al. Cryptic northern refugia and the origins of the modern biota , 2001 .
[80] M. Kirkpatrick,et al. WHEN SOURCES BECOME SINKS: MIGRATIONAL MELTDOWN IN HETEROGENEOUS HABITATS , 2001, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[81] L. Conradt,et al. Ecological and evolutionary processes at expanding range margins , 2001 .
[82] H. Mooney,et al. The evolutionary impact of invasive species , 2001, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[83] R. Shaw,et al. Range shifts and adaptive responses to Quaternary climate change. , 2001, Science.
[84] R. Holt,et al. Allee Effects, Invasion Pinning, and Species’ Borders , 2001, The American Naturalist.
[85] H. Pulliam. On the relationship between niche and distribution , 2000 .
[86] Y. Taniguchi,et al. CONDITION‐SPECIFIC COMPETITION: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE ALTITUDINAL DISTRIBUTION OF STREAM FISHES , 2000 .
[87] Steven D. Gaines,et al. Temperature or Transport? Range Limits in Marine Species Mediated Solely by Flow , 2000, The American Naturalist.
[88] D. Simberloff,et al. BIOTIC INVASIONS: CAUSES, EPIDEMIOLOGY, GLOBAL CONSEQUENCES, AND CONTROL , 2000 .
[89] M. Taper,et al. Interspecific Competition, Environmental Gradients, Gene Flow, and the Coevolution of Species' Borders , 2000, The American Naturalist.
[90] J. Bullock,et al. Geographical separation of two Ulex species at three spatial scales: does competition limit species' ranges? , 2000 .
[91] R. Huey,et al. Rapid evolution of a geographic cline in size in an introduced fly. , 2000, Science.
[92] Rob Channell,et al. Trajectories to extinction: spatial dynamics of the contraction of geographical ranges , 2000 .
[93] R. Holt,et al. Alternative causes for range limits: a metapopulation perspective , 2000 .
[94] A. Hoffmann,et al. LIMITS TO THE SOUTHERN BORDER OF DROSOPHILA SERRATA: COLD RESISTANCE, HERITABLE VARIATION, AND TRADE‐OFFS , 1999, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[95] H. Bruelheide,et al. Slug herbivory as a limiting factor for the geographical range of Arnica montana , 1999 .
[96] R. Gomulkiewicz,et al. Adaptation versus migration in demographically unstable populations , 1999 .
[97] M. Hochberg,et al. Can natural enemies enforce geographical range limits , 1999 .
[98] R Gomulkiewicz,et al. The effects of density dependence and immigration on local adaptation and niche evolution in a black-hole sink environment. , 1999, Theoretical population biology.
[99] James S. Clark,et al. Why Trees Migrate So Fast: Confronting Theory with Dispersal Biology and the Paleorecord , 1998, The American Naturalist.
[100] J. Crothers. A hot summer, cold winters, and the geographical limit of Trochocochlea lineata in Somerset , 1998 .
[101] A. Hastings,et al. Unexpected spatial patterns in an insect outbreak match a predator diffusion model , 1997, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[102] C. Galen,et al. Life on The Edge: Adaptation Versus Environmentally Mediated Gene Flow in The Snow Buttercup, Ranunculus Adoneus , 1997, The American Naturalist.
[103] M. Kirkpatrick,et al. Evolution of a Species' Range , 1997, The American Naturalist.
[104] Jack J. Lennon,et al. A metapopulation model of species boundaries , 1997 .
[105] R. Gomulkiewicz,et al. How Does Immigration Influence Local Adaptation? A Reexamination of a Familiar Paradigm , 1997, The American Naturalist.
[106] Dawn M. Kaufman,et al. THE GEOGRAPHIC RANGE: Size, Shape, Boundaries, and Internal Structure , 1996 .
[107] Jacob McC. Overton,et al. SHORT-TERM EVOLUTION OF REDUCED DISPERSAL IN ISLAND PLANT POPULATIONS , 1996 .
[108] G. C. Stevens,et al. Spatial Variation in Abundance , 1995 .
[109] P. Hebert,et al. Founder effects and geographical variation in the invading cladoceran Bosmina (Eubosmima) coregoni Baird 1857 in North America , 1994, Heredity.
[110] A. Hoffmann,et al. Species borders: ecological and evolutionary perspectives. , 1994, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[111] P. Kareiva,et al. Allee Dynamics and the Spread of Invading Organisms , 1993 .
[112] P. Hersteinsson,et al. Interspecific competition and the geographical distribution of red and arctic foxes Vulpes vulpes and Alopex lagopus , 1992 .
[113] R. Hobbs,et al. Disturbance, Diversity, and Invasion: Implications for Conservation , 1992 .
[114] R. Lande,et al. A Model of Population Growth, Dispersal and Evolution in a Changing Environment , 1989 .
[115] N. Shigesada,et al. Traveling periodic waves in heterogeneous environments , 1986 .
[116] R. N. Carter,et al. The geographical distribution of prickly lettuce (Lactuca serriola). I: A general survey of its habitats and performance in Britain , 1985 .
[117] Stephen D. Prince,et al. The geographical distribution of prickly lettuce (Lactuca serriola). II: Characteristics of populations near its distribution limit in Britain , 1985 .
[118] C. Stringer,et al. Evolution of a species , 1985 .
[119] D. Levin,et al. Ecological Constraints on the Establishment of a Novel Polyploid in Competition with Its Diploid Progenitor , 1984, The American Naturalist.
[120] J. Roughgarden. Theory of Population Genetics and Evolutionary Ecology: An Introduction , 1995 .
[121] R. N. Carter,et al. Epidemic models used to explain biogeographical distribution limits , 1981, Nature.
[122] P. Yodzis,et al. Competition for Space and the Structure of Ecological Communities , 1978 .
[123] J. Antonovics. THE NATURE OF LIMITS TO NATURAL SELECTION , 1976 .
[124] S. Levin. Dispersion and Population Interactions , 1974, The American Naturalist.
[125] C. Darwin. On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection: Or, The Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life , 2019 .
[126] R. Levins. Evolution in Changing Environments , 1968 .
[127] J. Marshall. Factors Limiting the Survival of Corynephorus canescens (L.) Beauv. in Great Britain at the Northern Edge of Its Distribution , 1968 .
[128] H. G. Baker,et al. Characteristics and modes of origin of weeds. , 1965 .
[129] J. G. Skellam. Random dispersal in theoretical populations , 1951, Biometrika.
[130] R. Fisher. THE WAVE OF ADVANCE OF ADVANTAGEOUS GENES , 1937 .
[131] W. O. Kermack,et al. A contribution to the mathematical theory of epidemics , 1927 .
[132] R. Gomulkiewicz,et al. Theories of Niche Conservatism and Evolution COULD EXOTIC SPECIES BE POTENTIAL TESTS ? 10 , 2022 .