Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Quaternary mammals and evolutionary theory: introductory remarks and historical perspective
- 2 A method for recognizing morphological stasis
- 3 Mosaic evolution at the population level in Microtus pennsylvanicus
- 4 Variogram analysis of paleontological data
- 5 Morphological change in Quaternary mammals: a role for species interactions?
- 6 Rates of evolution in Plio-Pleistocene mammals: six case studies
- 7 Patterns of dental variation and evolution in prairie dogs, genus Cynomys
- 8 Quantitative and qualitative evolution in the giant armadillo Holmesina (Edentata: Pampatheriidae) in Florida
- 9 Evolution of mammoths and moose: the Holarctic perspective
- 10 Evolution of hypsodonty and enamel structure in Plio-Pleistocene rodents
- 11 Patterns of variation and speciation in Quaternary rodents
- 12 Decrease in body size of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) during the late Holocene in South Carolina and Georgia
- 13 Short–term fluctuations in small mammals of the late Pleistocene from eastern Washington
- 14 Size change in North American Quaternary jaguars
- 15 Ontogenetic change of Ondatra zibethicus (Arvicolidae, Rodentia) cheek teeth analyzed by digital image processing
- 16 Morphological change in woodrat (Rodentia: Cricetidae) molars
- Index
3 - Mosaic evolution at the population level in Microtus pennsylvanicus
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Quaternary mammals and evolutionary theory: introductory remarks and historical perspective
- 2 A method for recognizing morphological stasis
- 3 Mosaic evolution at the population level in Microtus pennsylvanicus
- 4 Variogram analysis of paleontological data
- 5 Morphological change in Quaternary mammals: a role for species interactions?
- 6 Rates of evolution in Plio-Pleistocene mammals: six case studies
- 7 Patterns of dental variation and evolution in prairie dogs, genus Cynomys
- 8 Quantitative and qualitative evolution in the giant armadillo Holmesina (Edentata: Pampatheriidae) in Florida
- 9 Evolution of mammoths and moose: the Holarctic perspective
- 10 Evolution of hypsodonty and enamel structure in Plio-Pleistocene rodents
- 11 Patterns of variation and speciation in Quaternary rodents
- 12 Decrease in body size of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) during the late Holocene in South Carolina and Georgia
- 13 Short–term fluctuations in small mammals of the late Pleistocene from eastern Washington
- 14 Size change in North American Quaternary jaguars
- 15 Ontogenetic change of Ondatra zibethicus (Arvicolidae, Rodentia) cheek teeth analyzed by digital image processing
- 16 Morphological change in woodrat (Rodentia: Cricetidae) molars
- Index
Summary
Microevolution and macroevolution generally are recognized as distinct phenomena that reflect two extremes of the evolutionary hierarchy. “Microevolution” denotes the evolutionary processes that operate at the genetic level (mutation, recombination, selection, random drift) among breeding pairs and their progeny (at least for mammals). These processes occur within the lifetimes and geographic ranges of individual animals: within a few months and within less than 1 km2 in the case of rodents, up to a few decades and a few hundreds of square kilometers in the case of large herbivores. Expanded over a few generations (at most tens or hundreds of years), microevolution causes shifts in gene frequencies of populations that may or may not manifest themselves as phenotypic changes.
“Macroevolution,” on the other hand, refers to the processes that cause new species to arise and interact, an enterprise that seems quite lengthy in human terms, taking place over the geological expanse of thousands of years, in some cases, though usually over hundreds of thousands to millions of years. The geographic coverage encompasses the entire range of a species during its lifespan and can vary from a few tens or hundreds of square kilometers to an entire continent or more. The motor of macroevolution still is not clear: Some argue for cumulative microevolutionary changes, whereas others claim that macroevolution is decoupled from microevolution and is driven by processes that become operative only at the species level (e.g., species selection or the “effect hypothesis”); see the literature cited by Barnosky (1987), Vrba and Eldredge (1984), and Vrba and Gould (1986).
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
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