evolution (biology)

Type: 
Topical Term
Subfield: 
a
Alias: 
evolution (biology)

Evolution

Don Nardo, book editor
2005

The origin of species by means of natural selection

or, The preservation of favored races in the struggle for life
1979

Frogs, flies, and dandelions

speciation--the evolution of new species
2001

The ghosts of evolution

nonsensical fruit, missing partners, and other ecological anachronisms
2000

Life in Darwin's universe

evolution and the cosmos
1981

The Darwin archipelago

the naturalist's career beyond Origin of species
2011

The natural world

2002
A visual encyclopedia of living things on Earth, including plants, animals, and humans, particularly looking at animal survival and the organs and systems of the human body.

Animal talk

science and the voices of nature
1992

Invasive species

what everyone needs to know
"Of the 7,000 estimated non-native species present in North America, approximately 1,000 are invasive. Clearly, invasive species are in the minority, but their small numbers don't keep them from causing billions of dollars in economic and ecological harm each year. Policymakers and ecologists continue to try to figure out which species might be harmful, which invasive species are doing the most damage, and which of these might respond best to eradication efforts. Invasive species reports and case studies are prevalent in political, environmental, and scientific news cycles, and a significant portion of the public is concerned about the issue. In this book, Simberloff will first cover basic topics such as how non-native species are introduced, which areas have incurred the most biological invasions, and how the rates of biological invasions have shifted in recent years. He then moves on to the direct and indirect impacts of the impacts of invasive species on various ecosystems, such as habitat and resource competition, how invasive species transmit pathogens, and how introduced plants and animals can modify a habitat to favor other non-native species. Simberloff's final chapters will discuss the evolution of invasive species, the policies we currently have in place to manage them, and future prospects for controlling their spread. The book will also contain a section dedicated to the more controversial topics surrounding invasive species: invasive natives, useful non-native species, animal rights versus species rights, and non-native species' impacts on the biodiversity of an ecosystem"--.

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