The birds of northern Melanesia : speciation, ecology & biogeography /

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Mayr, Ernst, 1904-2005.
Imprint:Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2001.
Description:1 online resource (xxiv, 492 pages) : illustrations (some color), maps
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11189831
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Diamond, Jared M.
ISBN:9780195349665
0195349660
0195141709
9780195141702
1280835036
9781280835032
9786610835034
6610835039
Digital file characteristics:data file
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 443-464) and indexes.
English.
Print version record.
Summary:Origins and Acknowledgements. Introduction. Part 1. Northern Melanesia's Physical and Biological Environment. 1. Geology and geological history. 2. Climate. 3. Habitats and vegetation. 4. Terrestrial vertebrates other than birds. Part 2. Human History and Impacts. 5. Human history. 6. Ornithological exploration of Northern Melanesia. 7. Exterminations of bird populations. Part 3. The Northern Melanesia Avifauna. 8. Family composition. 9. Determinants of island species number. 10. Level of endemism, habitat preference, and abundance of each species. 11. Overwater dispersal ability of each speci.
Other form:Print version: Mayr, Ernst, 1904-2005. Birds of northern Melanesia. Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2001 0195141709 9780195141702
Description
Summary:Speciation is the process by which co-existing daughter species evolve from one ancestral species - e.g., humans, chimpanzees, and gorillas arising from a common ancestor around 5,000,000 years ago. However, many questions about speciation remain controversial. The Birds of Northern Melanesia provides by far the most comprehensive study yet available of a rich fauna, composed of the 195 breeding land and fresh-water bird species of the Bismarck and Solomon Archipelagoes east of New Guinea. This avifauna offers decisive advantages for understanding speciation, and includes famous examples of geographic variation discussed in textbooks of evolutionary biology. The book results from 30 years of collaboration between the evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr and the ecologist Jared Diamond. It shows how Northern Melanesian bird distributions provide snapshots of all stages in speciation, from the earliest (widely distributed species without geographic variation) to the last (closely related, reproductively isolated species occurring sympatrically and segregating ecologically). The presentation emphasizes the wide diversity of speciation outcomes, steering a middle course between one-model-fits-all simplification and ungeneralizable species accounts. Questions illuminated include why some species are much more prone to speciate than others, why some water barriers are much more effective at promoting speciation than others, and whether hypothesized taxon cycles, faunal dominance, and legacies of Pleistocene land bridges are real. These years of study have resulted in a huge database, complete with distributions of all 195 species on 76 islands, together with their taxonomy, colonization routes, ecological attributes, abundance, and overwater dispersal. Color plates depict 88 species and allospecies, many of which have never been seen before. For students of speciation, Northern Melanesian birds now constitute a model system against which other biotas can be compared. For population biologists interested in other problems besides speciation, this rich database can now be mined for insights.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xxiv, 492 pages) : illustrations (some color), maps
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 443-464) and indexes.
ISBN:9780195349665
0195349660
0195141709
9780195141702
1280835036
9781280835032
9786610835034
6610835039