NCEAS Working Groups
Comparative study of adaptive radiation
Project Description
Despite intensive study over the past half century, our conceptual understanding of adaptive radiation has advanced relatively little. A primary reason is that there has been no synthetic, integrative study of adaptive radiation across different evolutionary lineages. The result is that our database on adaptive radiation is composed of a hodgepodge of studies. Disparities among studies in approach, methodology, and organisms mean that each study is unique and that, as a result, testing general hypotheses, much less deriving new generalities, is difficult. This working group will bring together experts in ecology and evolutionary biology with different taxonomic specialties to develop appropriate methods to conduct a comparative study of adaptive radiation. Group members will gather data from both their own studies and from other studies on related taxa, thus amassing a large base of comparable data, allowing for
the testing of general questions about adaptive radiation, as well as leading to the development of new approaches and questions. Members of current working groups focusing on related questions will be invited to participate in some of this working group's activities, leading to mutually beneficial advances and synthesis.
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Principal Investigator(s)
Jonathan B. Losos
Project Dates
Start: August 1, 2001
End: November 1, 2002
completed
Participants
- John Alroy
- University of California, Santa Barbara
- Michael J. Benton
- University of Bristol
- T. Jonathan Davies
- University of Virginia
- Michael J. Donoghue
- Yale University
- Niles Eldredge
- American Museum of Natural History
- Brian D. Farrell
- Harvard University
- Rosie G. Gillespie
- University of California, Berkeley
- John L. Gittleman
- University of Virginia
- Thomas J. Givnish
- University of Wisconsin
- Peter R. Grant
- Princeton University
- Harry W. Greene
- Cornell University
- Luke J. Harmon
- Washington University in St. Louis
- Scott A. Hodges
- University of California, Santa Barbara
- Allan Larson
- Washington University in St. Louis
- Jonathan B. Losos
- Washington University in St. Louis
- Carlos Martinez del Rio
- University of Wyoming
- Mark A. McPeek
- Dartmouth College
- Arne Mooers
- Simon Fraser University
- Thomas J. Near
- University of California, Davis
- Mark Pagel
- University of Reading
- Andy Purvis
- Imperial College, London, Silwood Park Campus
- Robert E. Ricklefs
- University of Missouri, St. Louis
- George Roderick
- University of California, Berkeley
- Dolph Schluter
- University of British Columbia
- Ole Seehausen
- University of Hull
- Melanie L. J. Stiassny
- American Museum of Natural History
- Peter J. Wagner
- Field Museum
- David B. Wake
- University of California, Berkeley
- Jason Weir
- University of British Columbia
Products
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Journal Article / 2004
Community assembly through adaptive radiation in hawaiian spiders
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Journal Article / 2003
Tempo and mode of evolutionary radiation in Iguanian lizards
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Journal Article / 2010
Early bursts of body size and shape evolution are rare in comparative data
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Journal Article / 2006
Integrating phylogenies into community ecology