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This volume is the result of a symposium entitled "Variation in
Life Histories: Genetics and Evolutionary Processes" sponsored by
the Program in Evolutionary Ecology and Behavior of the University
of Iowa and held in Iowa City on October 13 and 14, 1980. Prompted
by a recent upsurge of interest in the evolution of life histories,
we chose this topic because of the obvious association between life
history traits and Darwinian fit ness. If such an association were
to be fruitfully investigated, it would require the closer
cooperation of population and evolutionary ecologists and
quantitative and population geneticists. To encourage such an
association, our symposium had four major aims: first, to
facilitate intellectual exchange across disciplines among an array
of biologists studying life histories; second, to encourage
exploration of genetic variance and covari ance for life history
traits; third, to consider the ecological background for genetic
vari ability; and finally, to facilitate a comparative overview
both within and among species. Obviously such broad aims cannot be
met totally in a single volume, but we think we have succeeded
reasonably well in providing a representative and nourishing intel
lectual feast. We see this book as a stimulus to the coordination
of future efforts in an important and expanding area of inquiry. We
have divided the book into six sections."
This volume is based on a workshop on "Population Biology of.
Plants The Interfaces (Genetics, Physiology, Demography,
Biogeography)," with a specific profile on "Diversification of
Plant Populations in relation to Modes of Reproduction and
Dispersal Genetic and Physiological Mechanisms," held in
Port-Camargue, France, from May 21-25, 1984. This workshop was
initiated by the "Unit of Population and Community Biology," in
Montpellier, and sponsored by the NATO Scientific Affairs Division
(ARW grant 876/83) and by the CNRS (Table ronde). All populations
are subjected to environmental "screening." Given a genetic
diversity whose expression can be modified by a degree of
demographic and individual plastici ty (at the morphological and
physiological levels), they present a structure related to their
environment. Ideally populations should be studied simultaneously
from the point of view of the population geneticist, the
physiologist and the demographer . These specific approaches only
become fully meaning full in the "light of Evolution." Among the
evolutionary forces that quantitatively act on the frequencies,
objects of interest of workers specialising in Population Biology
are selection and drift. An other main object of the study must be
dispersal. But, its playing extent - relative to the other forces -
in the adjustment to the environment is not fully recognized.
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