Evolution, 4th Edition

(Amelia) #1
Literature Cited

CHAPTER 1


  1. Bowler, P. J. 1989. Evolution: The History of an Idea. University of
    California Press, Berkeley.

  2. Bowler, P. J. 1996. Life’s Splendid Drama: Evolutionary Biology and the
    Reconstruction of Life’s Ancestry 1860–1940. University of Chicago
    Press, Chicago.

  3. Centers for Disease Control (CDC). 2013. Antibiotic resistance
    threats in the United States, 2013. http://www.cdc.gov/
    drugresistance/threat-report-2013

  4. Dobzhansky, Th. 1937. Genetics and the Origin of Species. Columbia
    University Press, New York.

  5. Dobzhansky, Th. 1973. Nothing in biology makes sense except in the
    light of evolution. American Biology Teacher 35: 125–129.

  6. Gemmell, N. J., V. J. Metcalf, and F. W. Allendorf. 2004. Mother’s
    curse: The effect of mtDNA on individual fitness and population
    viability. Trends Ecol. Evol. 19: 238–244.

  7. Gire, S. K., and 57 others. 2014. Genomic surveillance elucidates
    Ebola virus origin and transmission during the 2014 outbreak. Science
    345: 1369–1372.

  8. Goldschmidt, R. B. 1940. The Material Basis of Evolution. Yale
    University Press, New Haven, CT.

  9. Hahn, B. H., G. M. Shaw, K. M. De Cock, and P. M. Sharp. 2000. AIDS
    as a zoonosis: Scientific and public health implications. Science 287:
    607–614.

  10. Hey, J. 2011. Regarding the confusion between the population
    concept and Mayr’s “population thinking.” Q. Rev. Biol. 86: 253–264.

  11. Hofstadter, R. 1955. Social Darwinism in American Thought. Beacon
    Press, Boston, MA.

  12. Innocenti, P., E. H. Morrow, and D. K. Dowling. 2011. Experimental
    evidence supports a sex-specific selective sieve in mitochondrial
    genome evolution. Science 332: 845–848.

  13. Kimura, M. 1983. The Neutral Theory of Molecular Evolution.
    Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

  14. Laland, K. N., K. Sterelny, J. Odling-Smee, W. Hoppitt, and T. Uller.

  15. Cause and effect in biology revisited: Is Mayr’s proximate-
    ultimate dichotomy still useful? Science 334: 1512–1516.

  16. Levin, B. R., and R. M. Anderson. 1999. The population biology of
    anti-infective chemotherapy and the evolution of drug resistance:
    More questions than answers. In S. C. Stearns (ed.), Evolution in
    Health and Disease, pp. 125–137. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

  17. Lovejoy, A. O. 1936. The Great Chain of Being: A Study of the History of
    an Idea. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.

  18. Mayr, E. 1942. Systematics and the Origin of Species. Columbia
    University Press, New York.

  19. Mayr, E. 1982. The Growth of Biological Thought: Diversity, Evolution,
    and Inheritance. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.

  20. Mayr, E., and W. B. Provine (eds.). 1980. The Evolutionary Synthesis:
    Perspectives on the Unification of Biology. Harvard University Press,
    Cambridge, MA.

  21. Palumbi, S. R. 2001. The Evolution Explosion: How Humans Cause
    Rapid Evolutionary Change. W. W. Norton, New York.

  22. Paradis, J., and G. C. Williams. 1989. Evolution and Ethics: T. H.
    Huxley’s Evolution and Ethics with New Essays on Its Victorian and
    Sociobiological Context. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.

  23. Perron, G. G., R. F. Inglis, P. S. Pennings, and S. Cobey. 2015. Fighting
    microbial drug resistance: A primer on the role of evolutionary
    biology in public health. Evol. Appl. 8: 211–222.

  24. Perros, M. 2015. A sustainable model for antibiotics. Science 347:
    1062–1064.

  25. Rensch, B. 1959. Evolution above the Species Level. Columbia
    University Press, New York.

  26. Sharp, P. M., and B. H. Hahn. 2011. Origins of HIV and the AIDS
    epidemic. Cold Spring Harbor Perspect. Med. 1: a006841.

  27. Simpson, G. G. 1944. Tempo and Mode in Evolution. Columbia
    University Press, New York.

  28. Simpson, G. G. 1953. The Major Features of Evolution. Columbia
    University Press, New York.

  29. Smocovitis, V. B. 1996. Unifying Biology: The Evolutionary Synthesis and
    Evolutionary Biology. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.

  30. Stebbins, G. L. 1950. Variation and Evolution in Plants. Columbia
    University Press, New York.

  31. Székely, T., C. K. Catchpole, A. Devoogd, Z. Marchl, and T. J.
    Devoogd. 1996. Evolutionary changes in a song control area of
    the brain (HVC) are associated with evolutionary changes in song
    repertoire among European warblers (Sylviidae). Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B
    263: 607–610.


CHAPTER 2


  1. Boto, L. 2010. Horizontal gene transfer in evolution: Facts and
    challenges. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B 277: 819–827.

  2. Chippindale, P. T., R. M. Bonett, A. S. Baldwin, and J. J. Wiens. 2004.
    Phylogenetic evidence for a major reversal of life-history evolution in
    plethodontid salamanders. Evolution 58: 2809–2822.

  3. Collin, R., and M. P. Miglietta. 2008. Reversing opinions on Dollo’s
    Law. Trends Ecol. Evol. 23: 602–609.

  4. Crisp, A., C. Boschetti, M. Perry, A. Tunnacliffe, and G. Micklem. 2015.
    Expression of multiple horizontally acquired genes is a hallmark of
    both vertebrate and invertebrate genomes. Genome Biol. 16, art. No.
    50. doi:10.1186/s13059-015-0607-3.

  5. Darwin, C. 1859. The Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection,
    or the Preservation of Favored Races in the Struggle for Life. Modern
    Library, New York.


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