Parus major. Cost of reproduction in collared flycatchers Natural variation Manipulated ...

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Transcript of Parus major. Cost of reproduction in collared flycatchers Natural variation Manipulated ...

Page 1: Parus major. Cost of reproduction in collared flycatchers Natural variation Manipulated  OldWorldFlycatchers&TrueThrushes.htm.

Parus major

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Cost of reproduction in collared flycatchers

Natural variationManipulated

http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/Sampler6a-OldWorldFlycatchers&TrueThrushes.htm

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http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/Sampler6a-OldWorldFlycatchers&TrueThrushes.htm

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Snell and King 1977

http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/micropolitan/fresh/rotifer/frame7.html

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Tinkle 1969

http://www.calacademy.org/science_now/archive/wild_lives/fence_lizards_050601.html

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Heath et al. (2003) Science 299

http://www.environmentyukon.gov.yk.ca

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Heath et al. 2003

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Egg mass evolves in hatchery and influences wild population with hatchery immigrants

Heath et al. 2003

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“Suppose a white man to have been wrecked on an island inhabited by negroes, and to have established himself in friendly relations with a powerful tribe, whose customs he has learnt. Suppose him to possess the physical strength, energy, and ability of a dominant white race, and let the food and climate of the island suit his constitution; grant him every advantage which we can conceive a white to possess over the native; concede that in the struggle for existence his chance of long life will be much superior to that of the native chiefs; yet from all these admissions, there does not follow the conclusion that, after a limited or unlimited number of generations, the inhabitants of that island will be white. Our shipwrecked hero would probably become king; he would kill a great many blacks in the struggle for existence; he would have a great many wives and children, while many of his subjects would live and die as bachelors; an insurance company would accept his life at perhaps one-tenth of the premium which they would exact from the most favoured of the negroes. Our white’s qualities would certainly tend very much to preserve him to a good old age, and yet he would not suffice in any number of generations to turn his subjects’ descendants white. It may be said that the white colour is not the cause of the superiority. True, but it may be used simply to bring before the senses the way in which qualities belonging to one individual in a large number must be gradually obliterated. In the first generation there will be some dozens of intelligent young mulattoes, much superior in average intelligence to the negroes. We might expect the throne for some generations to be occupied by a more or less yellow king; but can anyone believe that the whole island will gradually acquire a white, or even yellow population, or that the islanders would acquire the energy, courage, ingenuity, patience, self-control, endurance, in virtue of which qualities our hero killed so many of their ancestors, and begot so many children; those qualities, in fact which the struggle for existence would select, if it could select anything?”  

(Fleming Jenkin. 1867. Review of On the Origin of Species)

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“It is almost universally admitted that cells, or the units of the body, propagate themselves by self-division or proliferation, retaining the same nature, and ultimately becoming converted into the various tissues and substances of the body. But besides this means of increase I assume that cells, before their conversion into completely passive or “formed material,” throw off minute granules or atoms, which circulate freely throughout the system, and when supplied with proper nutriment multiply by self-division, subsequently becoming developed into cells like those from which they were derived. These granules for the sake of distinctness may be called cell-gemmules. They are supposed to be transmitted from the parents to the offspring, and are generally developed in the generation which immediately succeeds, but are often transmitted in a dormant state during many generations and are then developed . . . Lastly, I assume that the gemmules in their dormant state have a mutual affinity for each other, leading to their aggregation either into buds or into the sexual elements. Hence, speaking strictly, it is not the reproductive elements, nor the buds, which generate new organisms, but the cells themselves throughout the body. These assumptions constitute the provisional hypothesis of which I have called Pangenesis.” 

(Darwin. 1868. The Variation of Animals and Plants under Domestication)

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