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Featured researches published by Sherwin Carlquist.


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 1966

The biota of long-distance dispersal. I. Principles of dispersal and evolution.

Sherwin Carlquist

A growing consensus of biologists now favors the effectiveness of long-distance dispersal as a means of populating islands. The observational and experimental bases on which this opinion rests are strong, but additional work is needed. A clear under-standing of long-distance dispersal is essential to an understanding of evolutionary trends on oceanic islands, because immigrant patterns are different from relict patterns. Since oceanic islands are short-lived, the evolutionary history of waif immigrants is also short. If a continental islands maintains long isolation, arrivals by long-distance dispersal may show evolutionary patterns more completely, as is true on New Zealand for example. The evolutionary patterns of waif biotas are influenced by isolation, by the broad range of available ecological opportunities, and, to a lesser extent, by the moderation characteristic of maritime climates. In addition to problems involved in becoming established, immigrants must overcome genetic disadvantages inherent in the fact that the number of original colonists is mall. Increase of genetic variability may be governed by ecological diversity, and persistence of a phylad may be increased by maximizing outcrossing and hybridization. Among features which are exhibited by waif biotas are adaptive radiation, flightlessness in animals, loss of dispersal mechanism in plants, and development of new ecological habits and growth forms. Each of these adaptations is evidently governed by a wide variety of factors. Weedy groups seem to possess the greatest ability to disperse and become established; they also excel at sensitive adaptation to island conditions. The waif biota contains few relicts except for recent relicts.


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 2012

The Biology of Island Floras. Edited by David Bramwell and Juli Caujapé-Castells. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.

Sherwin Carlquist


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 2008

120.00. xv + 522 p.; ill.; index. ISBN: 978-0-521-11808-8. 2011.

Sherwin Carlquist


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 2008

California's Fading Wildflowers: Lost Legacy and Biological Invasions.ByRichard A. Minnich. Berkeley (California): University of California Press.

Sherwin Carlquist


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 1991

49.95. xiv + 344 p.; ill.; index. 978‐0‐520‐25353‐7. 2008.

Sherwin Carlquist


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 1991

:California's Fading Wildflowers: Lost Legacy and Biological Invasions

Sherwin Carlquist


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 1986

Book Review:Organisation et Biologie des Thallophytes. R. Gorenflot, M. Guern

Sherwin Carlquist


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 1986

Organisation et Biologie des Thallophytes. R. Gorenflot , M. Guern

Sherwin Carlquist


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 1982

Book Review:The Origins of Japan's Modern Forests: The Case of Akita. Asian Studies at Hawaii, Number 31. Conrad Totman

Sherwin Carlquist


The Quarterly Review of Biology | 1982

The Origins of Japan's Modern Forests: The Case of Akita. Asian Studies at Hawaii, Number 31.Conrad Totman

Sherwin Carlquist

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