107 results
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2. Private reflections on a public life: The papers on Lady Bird Johnson at the LBJ library.
- Author
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Smith, Nancy Kegan
- Subjects
PRESIDENTS' spouses ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
Profiles former United States First Lady Lady Bird Johnson. Personal background of Johnson; Academic background of Lady Bird Johnson; Features of the documents on the private life of the former first lady; Achievements as first lady.
- Published
- 1990
3. Alexander Hamilton Church: His Family and Early Life.
- Author
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Scorgie, Michael E.
- Subjects
ACCOUNTING ,MANAGEMENT ,BIOGRAPHIES ,GENEALOGY - Abstract
The contribution of Alexander Hamilton Church (1866-1936) to accounting and management science is well known. Yet his biographers (Urwick and Wolf, 1984; Vangermeersch, 1988) found that his family and early life were enigmas. This paper opens the curtains drawn by Church and reveals details of his notable ancestry and his early life, including his first six months in the United States and Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Bedtime material: recording becoming asleep.
- Author
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Ashmore, Paul
- Subjects
DIARY (Literary form) ,SLEEP ,GEOGRAPHERS ,GEOGRAPHY ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
This article builds upon emerging work on the geographies of sleep by turning to the sleep-hopeful body. More specifically, it attends to the methodological challenges posed by this work and the question of how spaces and states of sleep-hopefulness might be approached by geographers. Building on existing research on the geographies of biography, personal diaries are offered as a methodological avenue through which the sleep-hopeful body might be thought through. Two private diaries are used to discuss sleep as an affective process. The affective allows an opportunity for thinking sleepy bodies in relation to other non-human objects, things and forces. This opens up questions of how such processes can be known and recorded by the subject. These are held in relation to a wider discussion on the (un)knowing subject. The paper considers how diary entries might be used to get at the spaces and relations of sleep, between human and non-human bodies and the affective forces between them. The article concludes by considering what this approach and use of diaries brings to nascent geographies of sleep, and in turn, how attending to geographies of sleep might add to existing non-representational geographies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The dialectical tragedy of the concept of wholeness: Ludwig von Bertalanffy's biography revisited. By David Pouvreau, in BCSSS book series: exploring unity through diversity, volume 1, edited by W. Hofkirchner. ISCE Publishing: Litchfield park, AZ, 2009, paper back, 264 pp., ISBN 13: 978-0-9817032-8-2
- Author
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Drack, Manfred
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "The Dialectical Tragedy of the Concept of Wholeness: Ludwig von Bertalanffy's Biography Revisited," Volume 1, by David Pouvreau, edited by W. Hofkirchner.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The cost of reproduction and sexual selection
- Author
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Sheldon, Ben C. and Hoglund, Jacob
- Subjects
REPRODUCTION ,MODELING (Sculpture) ,SEXUAL selection ,EDUCATION ,BIOGRAPHIES ,ECOLOGY ,MATHEMATICAL analysis - Abstract
When analysing how individuals allocate resources, sexual display should be regarded as is any other life-history trait: patterns of allocation are expected to be individually optimised. It thus follows that the costs of sexual selection can not be studied by simply comparing unmanipulated individual effort and some measure of cost. This rather trivial consequence of life-history theory has received surprisingly little attention in studies of sexual selection despite the almostuniversal acceptance of the theory and the fact that several papers have addressed the question specifically in the context of sexual selection. We therefore again outline why sexual displays are expected to be optimised at the level of the individual and why individuals with high access to resources should generally display at higher levels than individuals short of resources. We use some recent findings fromstudies of birds and spiders particularly relevant to the above questions that illustrate these principles. The examples we present show that the cost of sexual selection could be mediated in many ways and we thus suggest that future studies should focus on such mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
7. Everett Hughes: Sociology's Mission.
- Author
-
Strauss, Anselm
- Subjects
SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL marginality ,SOCIAL sciences ,SIMILARITY (Language learning) ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
In this paper, I reflect on the life and work of Everett Hughes. I discuss the similarities and differences between his writings and those of Robert Park; I describe his biographical influences and the use he made of marginality; I consider the relevance of his professional commitments for contemporary sociology and his unique vision of sociology's mission. I conclude by calling for renewed interest in his concepts and principles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Are orchid life histories really irregular: The case of Epipactis albensis
- Author
-
Kindlmann, P.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,BOTANY ,ECOLOGY ,REPRODUCTION - Abstract
Empirical data on many species of terrestrial orchids suggest that their between-year flowering pattern is extremely irregular and unpredictable due to costs associated with sexual reproduction and/or herbivory. In a more mathematical context, the irregular behaviour of orchids may be explained by difference equations describing deterministicgrowth of the vegetative dry weight and deterministic relationships between vegetative and reproductive dry weight. In this paper long-term data on the terrestrial orchid Epipactis albensis are used to testthis explanation of the irregular flowering patterns of orchids. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Ritual, Anti-Structure, and Religion: A Discussion of Victor Turner's Processual Symbolic Analysis.
- Author
-
Deflem, Mathieu
- Subjects
ANTHROPOLOGY ,RELIGION ,RITUAL ,SYMBOLISM ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
This paper offers a systematic outline and discussion of Victor Turner's anthropology of religion and ritual. Along with an examination of Turner's theoretical stance, an account of his personal life history is presented. Attention is paid to Turner's initial functional analysis, the development of his methodological frame and processual mode of analysis, and his conception of anti-structure. This account will serve to elaborate on some important issues in the study of ritual and religion. First, the discussion focuses on the parallels between Turner's life and the innovations in his approach. Second, his notion of religion in the study of ritual is examined. Finally, the distinctiveness, value, and limitations of his work are analyzed with reference to other approaches in symbolic anthropology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The Formation of Top Managers: a Discourse Analysis of Five Managerial Autobiographies.
- Author
-
Sims, David B. P.
- Subjects
EXECUTIVES ,CULTURE ,INDUSTRIAL management ,IMMIGRANTS ,BIOGRAPHIES ,WAR - Abstract
What do top managers see as the root of their success? This paper reports on a discourse analysis of five autobiographies from major industrial figures. Those chosen all had some disruption (war, being a refugee, or immigrant status) between the culture of their childhood and the culture in which they undertook their careers. This makes them more aware than most of their upbringing. Their accounts of their first 20 years are examined, and themes are drawn out for each of them. These themes are tabulated and some of the differences between them are discussed. Common themes are conspicuous by their absence. The paper discusses why this should not surprise us; top management is not one activity in one culture, and an upbringing that might have led one of these managers to success might have been disadvantageous to another. The paper concludes that the common factor between the accounts of the managers is that they all regard their upbringing as having fitted them particularly well for the company, industry and culture in which they were eventually successful. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Events as a Structuring Device in Biographical Mark-up and Metadata.
- Author
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Buckland, Michael and Ramos, Michele Renee
- Subjects
METADATA ,METADATA mapping ,DATA structures ,INFORMATION science ,INFORMATION organization ,INFORMATION technology ,PROSOPOGRAPHY ,BIOGRAPHIES ,ENCYCLOPEDIAS & dictionaries - Abstract
The article focuses on a progress report regarding an investigation of using events as a structuring device for mark-up and metadata structures in biographical texts. It describes a part of a series of studies of how learning can be facilitated through an easy way of finding resources. It explains the what, when, where, and who or "4W" approach for representing events and the granularity of these events, which are characterized by activity, time and location. It also discusses the collective biography and prosopography and terminology issues.
- Published
- 2009
12. The Landscape of Paul Errington's Work.
- Author
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Pritchard, James A., Desinski, Diane M., Olechnowski, Brian, and Vannimwegen, Run
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,ETHICS ,MARSHES ,MUSKRAT ,NATURALISTS ,PREDATION ,WILDLIFE management - Abstract
The 50th anniversary of the publication of Paul Errington's Of Men and Marshes will occur in 2007, Using "landscape" in a figurative as well as a physical sense, we examine Errington's life in wildlife science as well as the places where he conducted his research. While Errington's scientific work on predation has received acclaim, we argue his research also contributed to fundamental changes in cultural and popular views of wetlands. Similar to Aldo Leopold, Errington's writings transcended science and ethics as he wrote about the intrinsic values of marshes. Errington's attempts to translate his scientific experience for a wider audience ultimately contributed to public understanding of the importance of restoring wetlands. As we reflect on the public roles of wildlife professionals, Paul Errington's work provides a visible road map to follow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Gerard de Zeeuw: models, systems, support and research.
- Author
-
Vahl, Martha
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,SYSTEMS design ,SYSTEMS theory ,SYSTEM analysis - Abstract
In this bio-memo an introduction to, and some background of, the life and work of Gerard de Zeeuw is presented. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. A new view of life-history evolution?
- Author
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Stearns, S. C.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,EVOLUTIONARY theories - Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Biography Building To Insure The Future: Women's Negotiation Of Gender Relevancy In Medical School.
- Author
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Hammond, Judith M.
- Subjects
WOMEN medical students ,BIOGRAPHIES ,SOCIAL conditions of women ,IDENTITY (Psychology) ,MEDICAL schools ,VOCABULARY ,GENDER - Abstract
In this paper I focus on how women in their first year of medical school build biographies of fitness as a means of negotiating the status of peer in a male-dominated group. Their goal is to negotiate a master status and primary identity as medical student. They do this by making gender, a key characteristic, both irrelevant and relevant, I also discuss the technique of using interview data to provide a particular perspective on the medical students' situation and their use of the interview as a vehicle for identity building. I conclude that women's apparent success in maintaining identities as successful people and in negotiating barriers to the collegial status stem both from their number and from using situationally appropriate vocabularies of motives to build past and future biographies of fitness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Thomas Jefferson: Reputation and Legacy – By Francis D. Cogliano.
- Author
-
Siry, Steven E.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,NONFICTION - Abstract
The article reviews the book "Thomas Jefferson: Reputation and Legacy," by Francis D. Cogliano.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Philip G. Pardey.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,AGRICULTURAL economists ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,RURAL land use ,AGRICULTURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The article profiles Philip G. Pardey, a Fellow of the American Agricultural Economics Association in 2006. Pardey's various affiliations are presented. He is a professor of the Department of Applied Economics at the University of Minnesota from 2002 up to the present in 2006. He is also the director of the International Science and Technology Practice and Policy center at the University of Minnesota from 2004 up to the present. He comes to economics with a grounding in agricultural science that reinforced his interest in science and technology policy.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Barry K. Goodwin.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,AGRICULTURAL economists ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,RURAL land use ,AGRICULTURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The article profiles Barry K. Goodwin, a Fellow of the American Agricultural Economics Association in 2006. Goodwin's various affiliations and awards are presented. He is William Neal Reynolds Distinguished Professor at the Departments of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Economics from 2003 and up to the present in 2006. He is also the Associated Editor of the "American Journal of Agricultural Economics" from 1999 to 2001. He develops a deep interest in the quantitative analysis of markets and policy issues important to agriculture.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Biographical notes on the authors.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,AUTHORS - Abstract
Presents biographical notes on the authors of several research published in this issue of the journal "Systems Research and Behavioral Science." Debiprasad Dash; Richard Jung; David Garcia.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Maynard Keynes: An economist's Biography.
- Author
-
Mini, Piero V.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
D E Moggridge's perhaps too exhaustive biography is examined and some questions are raised relative to Keynes' views on theory and their source, and his views on German reparations and whether Britain should have accepted the original provisions of the agreement providing for establishment of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Dennis Robertson: essays on his life and work – By Gordon A. Fletcher.
- Author
-
Howson, Susan
- Subjects
NONFICTION ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
The article reviews the book "Dennis Robertson: essays on his life and work," by Gordon A. Fletcher.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Alexander L. George—Biographical Information (Compiled by Stanley A. Renshon and Juliette George).
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
The article lists biographical information about the scholar and author Alexander L. George, including his professional experience, academic grants, and written materials.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The history of Eduard Lindemann's collection kept in the Herbarium of the Botany Department of St. Petersburg State University (LECB).
- Author
-
Byalt, Vyacheslav V., Bubyreva, Valentina A., and Ortova, Larisa V.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,PLANT collectors ,PLANT collecting ,HERBARIA ,BOTANICAL specimens - Abstract
In this article, we present the results of a study of the herbarium collection by E.E. Lindemann kept at the Herbarium of the Botanical Department of St. Petersburg State University (LECB). Biographical data on Lindemann are given. The history of the collection, its contents and current status are discussed. The main part of Lindemann's herbarium (around 200,000 specimens) is kept at LECB. The collection was started by Eduard Lindemann's father, Emanuel Lindemann. It contains unique specimens collected by 844 collectors all over the world and sent to the Lindemanns by some of the most famous botanists of the 19th century in exchange. The most interesting specimens include those of C. Bauhin, J. Breyn and A. Clegero (XVII c.), C. Thunberg, P.S. Pallas (XVIII c.), C. Willdenow, F.A. Marschall von Bieberstein, Ch. Steven, E. Boissier, J.D. Hooker (XIX c.) and many others. At present, we have identified approximately 150 type specimens, but their actual number is much greater. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
24. Nakomaha: a Counter-Colonial Life and its Contexts. Anthropological Approaches to Biography.
- Author
-
MacClancy, Jeremy
- Subjects
NI-Vanuatu literature ,BIOGRAPHIES ,IMPERIALISM ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
In the anthropology of Melanesia, local life-histories or biographies have all too often been presented in a non-problematic, acritical manner. Instead of repeating this hide-bound style in an unthinking manner, I attempt to be more ethnographically sensitive to local realities and to open up the genre by presenting information about a ni-Vanuatu leader in a deliberately achronic style. By providing relevant data in terms of their sources, I put up front the biases and blindspots of each source, to enable easier assessment of their worth and to forestall premature closure. In the process I examine the conflictive dialogue between locals and expatriate officials in Vanuatu between the 1940s and 1960s. The final aim is that the open-ended approach adopted here makes the resulting text more accessible to indigenous readers, who might wish to produce their own version of the subject's life-history. Writing this kind of biography can thus be viewed as a further attempt towards decolonizing the anthropology of former colonial states. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Terrorist Recruitment and Radicalization in Saudi Arabia.
- Author
-
Hegghammer, Thomas
- Subjects
TERRORISTS ,BIOGRAPHIES ,TERRORISM ,POPULATION - Abstract
The article presents the author's analysis of profiles of Islamic militants drawn exclusively from Saudi Arabia. The author uses the collection of biographies of Saudi militants compiled from a broad range of primary and secondary sources. He discusses the roots of Al-Qaeda on the Arabian Peninsula. The author examines the geographical distribution of Al-Qaeda militants to the distribution of the population as a whole.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Enid Mumford: a tribute.
- Author
-
Avison, David, Bjørn-Andersen, Niels, Coakes, Elayne, Davis, Gordon B., Earl, Michael J., Elbanna, Amany, Fitzgerald, Guy, Galliers, Robert D., Hirschheim, Rudy, Iivari, Juhani, Klein, Heinz K., Land, Frank, de Marco, Marco, Pettigrew, Andrew M., Porra, Jaana, Stahl, Bernd Carsten, Sørensen, Carsten, Wood, Bob, and Wood-Harper, Trevor
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,SOCIAL informatics ,INFORMATION resources management ,INFORMATION resources ,INFORMATION technology ,KNOWLEDGE management ,BUSINESS education ,COMPUTERS & civilization - Abstract
The article profiles researcher Enid Mumford, written by those who have been influenced by her and know her personally. Andrew Pettigrew both her work and humanity. Frank Land is often associated with the Mumford's work and in his tribute he discusses the roots of Enid’s views in socio-technical design, her influence on the National Computing Centre and through her many roles in practice where she acted as facilitator for humanistic as well as successful change using technology. Michael Earl recognizes her special personal qualities as a teacher as well as her impact on practice. Gordon Davis describes Mumford's standing in the field that he writes of her impact on himself and his understanding of information systems (IS) and IS research.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Biography and gender in youth transitions.
- Author
-
Stauber, Barbara
- Subjects
ADOLESCENT psychology ,GENDER ,LABOR market ,CHANGE ,EDUCATION ,BIOGRAPHIES ,PERFORMANCE ,YOUNG adults ,YOUTH - Abstract
In this chapter, the author argues for the essential role of “doing gender” in the transition of young people from education to the labor market. Two relevant concepts are introduced: biographicity and gender competence. They are illustrated with a female and a male case. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Love and Death in Germany: The Marital Biography and Its Effect on Mortality.
- Author
-
Brockmann, Hilke and Klein, Thomas
- Subjects
MORTALITY ,GENDER ,WIDOWHOOD ,BIOGRAPHIES ,DEMOGRAPHY - Abstract
In this article, we analyze how the marital biography is affecting mortality in Germany today (N = 12,484). We find support for temporal selection into marriage for both genders, but the effect is stronger for men. In addition, protection through marriage results from long-term accumulation of survival advantages and from the attenuation of higher mortality risks that occur immediately after a transition into or out of a marriage. Moreover, women are more likely to keep survival advantages from previous marriages and to forget about survival disadvantages from divorces and widowhood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Claude Lévi-Strauss – Denis Bertholet.
- Author
-
Gibb, Robert
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,NONFICTION - Abstract
Reviews the book "Claude Lèvi-Strauss," by Denis Bertholet.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Comparative analysis of phylogenetic and fishing effects in life history patterns of teleost fishes.
- Author
-
Rochet, Marie-Joëlle, Cornillon, Pierre-André, Sabatier, Robert, and Pontier, Dominique
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,ICHTHYOLOGY ,FISHING - Abstract
The effects of fishing on life history traits and life history strategies of teleost fishes are analysed by a new comparative method that splits traits into an allometric part (size effect), an autoregressive phylogenetic component, and an environmental component (fishing effect). Both intra- and inter-specific variation of age and size at maturity, fecundity, adult size and egg size are analysed by comparing 84 populations of 49 species submitted to various fishing pressures. Two axes of life history diversification are found among teleosts. One is the well-known slow-fast continuum separating short-lived and early maturing species (like Clupeiformes) from longer-lived species that mature late relative to their size and spawn larger eggs (like salmonids or Scorpaeniformes). An additional strategy involves the schedule of resource allocation to growth and reproduction. Indeterminate growth allows higher teleosts (e.g. Gadiformes) to reach a large size while maturing early and laying small eggs. Increasing fishing pressure decreases age at maturity and egg size, and increases fecundity at maturity, the slope of the fecundity-length relationship and relative size at maturity. These compensations for higher adult mortality differ among life history strategies. Indeterminate growth is associated with a greater flexibility in resource allocation to growth and reproduction that facilitates greater resilience to fishing mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Life history plasticity and population regulation in sea otters.
- Author
-
Monson, Daniel H., Estes, James A., Bodkin, James L., and Siniff, Donald B.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,BIRTH control ,MARINE mammals ,MATERIAL plasticity ,REPRODUCTION ,SEA otter - Abstract
We contrasted body condition, and age-specific reproduction and mortality between a growing population of sea otters (Enhydra lutris ) at Kodiak Island and a high-density near-equilibrium population at Amchitka Island, Alaska. We obtained data from marked individuals, population surveys, and collections of beach-cast carcasses. Mass:length ratios indicated that females (but not males) captured in 1992 at Amchitka were in poorer condition than those captured at Kodiak in 1986–1987. In 1993, the condition of females at Amchitka improved in apparent response to two factors: (1) an episodic influx of Pacific smooth lumpsuckers, Aptocyclus ventricocus , from the epi-pelagic zone, which otters consumed; and (2) an increase in the otters’ benthic invertebrate prey resulting from declining otter numbers. Reproductive rates varied with age (0.37 [CI=0.21 to 0.53] births female
-1 yr-1 for 2–3-yr-olds, and 0.83 [CI=0.69 to 0.90] for females ≥4 yr old), and were similar at both areas. Weaning success (pups surviving to ≥120 d), in contrast, was almost 50% lower at Amchitka than at Kodiak and for females ≥4 yr of age was 0.52 (CI=0.38 to 0.66) vs 0.94 (CI=0.75 to 0.99), respectively. Sixty-two percent of the preweaning pup losses at Amchitka occurred within a month of parturition and 79% within two months. Postweaning survival was also low at Amchitka as only 18% of instrumented pups were known to be alive one year after mother-pup separation. Adult survival rates appeared similar at Amchitka and Kodiak. Factors affecting survival early in life thus are a primary demographic mechanism of population regulation in sea otters. By maintaining uniformly high reproductive rates over time and limiting investment in any particular reproductive event, sea otters can take advantage of unpredictable environmental changes favorable to pup survival. This strategy is consistent with predictions of “bet-hedging” life history models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The best in all possible worlds? A quantitative genetic study of geographic variation in the meadow vole, Microtus pennsylvanicus.
- Author
-
Hansen, Thomas F. and Boonstra, Rudy
- Subjects
ZOOLOGY ,GENETICS ,GEOGRAPHY ,MICROTUS pennsylvanicus ,POPULATION biology ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
The meadow vole, Microtus pennsylvanicus , is the most widely distributed Microtus species in North America. Across its range, it shows marked demographic differences, experiences a large range of climatic conditions, and varies considerably in body size and life-history characteristics. To study the genetic basis of the geographic variation in size and life history of this species, we subjected three populations, one from central Canada and two from eastern Canada, to quantitative genetic analysis in the lab. We studied the variance and covariance of several size and growth variables as well as age and size at maturity by means of population crosses, full-sib analysis, and parent-offspring regressions. We found that the phenotypic differences among these populations are almost entirely due to environmental effects. However, within populations, additive genetic and maternal effects explain most of the variation. We discuss possible explanations for the lack of genetic differences among the populations and speculate that a similar reaction norm is maintained in all populations through heterogeneity in the temporal or spatial environment that the populations experience. The heterogeneity may be mediated through population density fluctuations, climatic variation, or variation in site productivity. Thus, we hypothesize that M. pennsylvanicus has evolved to be the best in all possible worlds rather than in one actual world. This study highlights the crucial importance of maternal and environmental effects on the size, growth, and life history of small rodents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Amazing Miss Burchfield.
- Author
-
Guy, Mary E.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,WOMEN editors ,WOMEN in the civil service - Abstract
What goes around, comes around: the woman who once solicited others to produce manuscripts for PAR is now the subject of a manuscript. Laverne Burchfield was managing editor of this journal for 15 volumes, from 1943 to 1958, and in ASPA's early days before it had an executive director, she served as secretary/treasurer for the association and she wrote the proposal that funded the first executive director. This is her biography--a woman passionately committed to the world of public service, the world of ideas, and, simply, the world in its natural splendor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Adaptation: a life history perspecitve
- Author
-
Kozlowiski, J.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,MODELING (Sculpture) ,POPULATION dynamics - Abstract
The use of optimization models to study adaptations is discussed. The optimal value of a trait must maximize fitness, that is, lifetime reproductive success. This means that every trait under optimization must be translated into demographic parameters. Although there is no universal measure of fitness, some general rules are given about whether net reproductive rate R or intrinsic population growth rate r should be maximized in given conditions. Models maximizing R are usually simple, and they produce easy-to-interpret predictions. The scope of applicability of models assuming maximization of R broadens if we aresatisfied with post hoc explanations of natural patterns (predictions in a weak sense). Optimization models should be verified using comparative methods. With a comparative method, however, optimization models become tools for approaching general questions about selective forces and the resulting patterns, not for studying local adaptations. Hypotheses about local adaptations are always difficult to test, and optimization models seem of little help here. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
35. The social context of life history evolution
- Author
-
Svensson, Erik and Sheldon, Ben C.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,DEMOGRAPHY ,ECOLOGY ,EVOLUTIONARY theories ,PHYSIOLOGY ,SOCIOLOGY ,ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
We discuss ways in which the social environment an individual inhabits may have influenced, and continues to influence, the life history patterns it follows. We argue that the social context in which a lifehistory is expressed has the potential to influence the evolution ofthat life history in four distinct ways, and that these may not always have been fully considered in classic life history theory. First, conflicts of interest are frequent when non-clonal organisms interact, and this is particularly true for reproduction, where conflicts between the sexes and between parents and offspring have numerous potential impacts on life histories. Second, the occurrence of frequency- and density-dependent selection arising from social interactions can have important consequences for predicting the evolutionary trajectories of life histories. Third, research in sexual selection has often been free of a life-history perspective; combining the two has the potential to offer interesting insights into the process of sexual selection and the evolution of sexual ornamentation. Finally, we illustrate some of the more dramatic outcomes of these factors for life history evolution by discussing the evolution and maintenance of within population polymorphisms in life histories. An appreciation of the rolesof social interactions may provide a solution to some long-standing questions in life-history research, such as how high levels of additive genetic variance for traits closely related to fitness are maintained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Mechanistic and selective causes of life history trade-offs and plasticity
- Author
-
Sinervo, Barry and Svensson, Erik
- Subjects
POPULATION biology ,BIOGRAPHIES ,ECOLOGY ,ENDOCRINOLOGY ,EVOLUTIONARY theories ,GENETICS ,PHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
We discuss the mechanistic ('proximate') and selective ('ultimate') factors that cause life history trade-offs such as the trade-off between offspring quality and quantity and that between current and future reproduction. We point out that key concepts in life history theoryand evolutionary biology such as negative genetic correlations and trade-offs can be understood in terms of physiological mechanisms. More specifically, negative genetic correlations causing trade-offs between life history traits are caused by hormones and their regulatory genes that have multiple and opposing, pleiotropic effects on two or more traits. Consequently, investigations of these mechanisms is a natural complement to the classical population genetical approach. We critically dissect the argument, put forward by other workers, that experimental manipulations of organismal physiology or other phenotypic traits do not reveal genetic life history trade-offs, but only reflects phenotypic plasticity. We reject this idea and discuss the proposed alternative approach: laboratory selection experiments. We point out some problems associated with laboratory selection experiments and suggest that experimental manipulations of life history traits and secondary sexual characters in natural populations is an important and invaluable empirical method if one aims to get a better understandingof life history evolution in the wild. Finally, we discuss the proximate-ultimate dichotomy, the physiology of phylogenetic constraints, the role of physiological mechanisms in population differentiation inlife history trade-offs and the importance of phenotypic plasticity in shaping such trade-offs. We suggest that life history plasticity in many cases may stem from the same endocrine mechanisms (gonadotropin, gonadal steroids, and adrenal glucocorticoids) as those involved in life history trade-offs. In particular, attempts to dichotomize life history trade-offs and life history plasticity may be unrealistic as t [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Intersexual conflict in spiders
- Author
-
Lubin, Yael and Schneider, Jutta M.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,ECOLOGY ,INSECT behavior ,REPRODUCTION - Abstract
Reproductive strategies of males and females usually differ and, as a consequence, may impose asymmetric costs of reproduction on the twosexes and result in conflict between the sexes. In spiders, males donot provide parental care and females can store sufficient sperm forseveral clutches. These characteristics define the stage for a conflict between males and females that occurs mainly over the frequency of mating. Factors such as sexual size dimorphism, operational sex ratio, mating system and life-history strategies are likely to influencethe degree of conflict and its outcome for different species. Male spiders may suffer large costs of mating due to mate search, assessment of female condition, courtship and cannibalistic tendencies of their mates. Courtship may reduce cannibalism, although in some cases, males benefit from being cannibalised by having an increased fertilisation rate or greater offspring fitness. In some species, limited mating capacities will increase the value of the current mating relative to future reproduction. Apart from a possible benefit of genetic variability within a clutch, females may not benefit from multiple mating and multiple mating may even be costly. Exceptions occur if additional resources are provided by males or when offspring fitness increaseswith additional mating. Forced copulation, prey theft, loss of the web and reduction of foraging time can all result in reduced reproductive success for females. We discuss the interacting influences of life-history traits (especially patterns of growth and maturation and sexual size dimorphism) and the reproductive strategies of males and females, using a semelparous spider, Stegodyphus lineatus (Eresidae), as an example of a species in which males and females can have strongly conflicting interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
38. Considerations of optimal litter size in mammals
- Author
-
Ylonen, Hannu and Sikes, Robert S.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,ECOLOGY ,EVOLUTIONARY theories ,MAMMALS ,REPRODUCTION - Abstract
Recent advances in understanding mammalian reproductive patterns mirror general developments in phylogenetic, physiological, and ecological research. We provide an overview of the diverse approaches used instudying mammalian litter size and discuss recent advances in evolutionary ecological theory and experimental data concerning reproductive patterns. Extensively documented natural history studies and breeding data from work in applied zoology and animal husbandry constitute a rich source of information for comparative studies. Such studies have helped identify fundamental differences in reproductive 'strategies' depending on whether taxa produce altricial or precocial young andwhether a given reproductive effort results in a single offspring ora litter. On the other hand, research on ecological and physiological correlates of litter size is providing new insights about reproductive energetics, the relationship between resource availability and litter size, and optimality in varying environments in general. Continuing experimental approaches are broadening our understanding of the mechanistic bases of patterns of mammalian litter size, but such studies, especially those involving manipulation of litter size, must carefully consider the potential biases introduced by experimentally induced non-congruence between pre- and postnatal litter sizes. For example, without accounting for the effects of placental hormones on mammogenesis and lactation, postnatal manipulations of litter size might be based on faulty assumptions implicit in such manipulations. To conclude, despite substantial advances in these diverse approaches, our degree of understanding of optimal litter size in mammals remains unclear because of inconsistencies in data often used in comparative studies and because of physiological and ecological constraints on littersize adjustments that hinder or bias experimental approaches. These areas should be addressed in future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
39. Predator-induced changes in life history in two anuran tadpoles: effects of predator diet
- Author
-
Ranta, Esa, Laurila, Anssi, and Kujasalo, Jutta
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,ECOLOGY ,HERPETOLOGY ,PREDATION - Abstract
We studied effects of the non-lethal presence of a predator on behaviour and larval life history of two species of anuran tadpoles, common frog, Rana temporaria, and common toad, Bufo bufo. We manipulated predator diet to study whether differences in chemically perceived predation risk affect the tadpoles. Tadpoles of both species were raisedat two food levels either in the absence of the predator or in the presence of an insect-, frog- or toad-fed larval dragonfly Aeshna juncea. R. temporaria tadpoles lowered their activity in the presence of a predator and also avoided the predator spatially. Furthermore, theyshowed the strongest response to tadpole-fed predators. The number of days elapsed since the last provisioning of food affected the behaviour of both species. In R. temporaria, differences in activity levelbetween predator treatments vanished as the food resources were depleted. In B. bufo, activity was lower in the presence of a toad-fed predator shortly after food had been added to the containers. Spatial avoidance of predators by B. bufo was stronger in the presence of a toad-fed predator than when an insect- or frog-fed predator was present. In both tadpole species growth rate was higher at the high food level but remained unaffected by the predator treatments. In both species individuals at higher food level metamorphosed earlier and at larger size. The metamorphic responses to predator treatments differed between the species. R. temporaria metamorphosed later and at larger size in the presence of tadpole-fed predators than in the control treatment or in the presence of an insect-fed predator. B. bufo metamorphosed earlier in the presence of a toad-fed predator, but this was only slightly correlated to metamorphic size. Manipulations of predator diet affected tadpole life history in both species. However, predator effects on larval life history were not mediated by tadpole behaviour in either species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
40. Density dependence in post-recruitment processes of juvenile sparidsin the littoral of the Mediterranean Sea
- Author
-
Planes, S., Lenfant, P., and Jouvenel, J.-Y.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,ECOLOGY ,ICHTHYOLOGY - Abstract
While variability in recruitment of young reef fish is now recognised, the question remains how the variation in recruitment will contribute to determining assemblage structure. This has been the basis for an active debate about whether patterns in abundance are determined by the supply of planktonic larvae or whether it results from competition (for space, food, etc.) between potential recruits leading to density-dependent recruitment. We tested population regulation of newly recruited juveniles of Sparidae in the north-western Mediterranean Sea. Recruitment of three species of Sparidae was followed over a three-month period in each of two years to estimate the peak density of new recruits settling from the ocean, the rate of mortality occurring during the first three months after settlement, and the final density after three months. Sites and species were carefully chosen in order to avoid migration during the survey. Initial density of recruited larvae of Diplodus spp. varied among species and sites from 0.045 to 3.8 individuals per metre of coastline. Mortality estimates also variedenormously. Between 24.3% and 99.4% of the initial population disappeared within three months. Our survey demonstrated that both post-settlement mortality (r = 0.847; p < 0.0001; n = 18) and final density (r = 0.818; p < 0.0001; n = 18) were correlated with density of recruitment and consequently that both pre-recruitment (larval phase) and post-recruitment processes regulated sparid populations of the Mediterranean Sea. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Condition, disease and immune defence
- Author
-
Moller, A. P., Christe, Ph., Erritzoe, J., and Mavarez, J.
- Subjects
DISEASES ,ECOLOGY ,EVOLUTIONARY theories ,IMMUNOLOGY ,PARASITOLOGY ,REPRODUCTION ,BIOGRAPHIES - Abstract
Life-history traits and secondary sexual characters often demonstrate condition-dependence, and reproductive success thus ultimately appears to be determined by condition. Here we test the hypothesis that anti-parasite defense is condition-dependent and thus ultimately limits fitness. Animal hosts defend themselves against parasites by an efficient immune system that changes its activity level depending on level of infection. Since immune function is costly, as demonstrated by several field studies, we predicted that large immune defence organs should be maintained when the costs of an elevated immune response were reduced, or when the benefits were increased. Hence, the size of immune defence organs was predicted to increase in response to diseasedue to increased benefits of investment in immune function, and the size was predicted to increase in response to high body condition because of reduced costs of investment in immune function. A comparativestudy of birds demonstrated that the size of the spleen was significantly increased among individuals suffering from parasitic infectionsand signs of disease as compared to healthy individuals. Furthermore, we found evidence for a positive association between spleen size and body condition. These findings are consistent with the hypothesisedcost of immune function and hence a cost of anti-parasite defence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
42. Capital versus income breeding: an ectothermic perspective
- Author
-
Bonnet, Xavier
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,BREEDING ,ECOLOGY ,FORCE & energy ,REPRODUCTION - Abstract
Energy storage is an important component of life-history variation. Some organisms ('income breeders') fuel reproductive expenditure by simultaneous feeding, whereas others ('capital breeders') fuel reproduction from energy gained earlier, and stored prior to use. Most published discussions of this topic have focused primarily on endothermic animals (birds and mammals), and have interpreted the costs and benefits of these alternative breeding tactics in the context of endothermy. The far more diverse array of ectothermic animals has received less attention in this respect. Many features associated with ectothermypreadapt organisms to store energy for long periods prior to use (i.e. to rely on 'capital' rather than 'income'). For example, birds andmammals experience high costs (in terms of mobility and thermoregulatory efficiency) if they store large body reserves. By contrast, the energetic and demographic costs associated with storage, maintenance,and utilisation of body reserves are low in many ectotherms. Thus, capital breeding (which may also be more efficient energetically in many situations) is extremely common in these low energy systems. Ectotherms comprise the most extreme examples of capital breeders, with a strong tendency towards semelparity where the capital of reserves is massively invested into a single reproductive event. Overall, theoretical and empirical studies of the evolution of capital versus income breeding as alternative strategies of resource use should take account of the important role played by alternative thermoregulatory and metabolic systems. The acquisition of endothermy in avian and mammalianlineages has involved a massive shift towards reliance on 'income breeding', and the full spectrum of life-history variation in this respect cannot be appreciated without detailed examination of ectothermicorganisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Nestling obesity and variability of food delivery in Manx shearwaters, Puffinus puffinus
- Author
-
Hill, J. K. and Hamer, K. C.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,MANX shearwater ,NUTRITION ,OBESITY - Abstract
Procellariiform seabirds such as Manx Shearwaters, Puffinus puffinus, accumulate large quantities of lipid during the nestling period, the purpose of which remains unclear. This paper examines temporal and age-specific variation in the pattern of food delivery to nestling Manx Shearwaters, to determine whether food delivery was likely to be determined primarily by the availability of food to adults at sea or by a chick's short-term nutritional requirements. The variability in daily food delivery to chicks in the context of nestling obesity is then discussed. 2. For all but the youngest and oldest age classes, individual meals delivered by adults averaged 49 g, which was 12% of mean adult mass over the same period. More than 80% of chicks were led each night and the maximum interval between feeding events for any chick was four nights. Feeding conditions did exert some influence over the ability of adults to feed their offspring, but deviations from expected values for both feeding frequency and meal size were restricted to a small number of nights, included values both higher and lower than expected and did not persist for more than one night in succession. These results were not compatible with the notion that large lipid reserves accumulated by chicks during their development provide insurance against prolonged interruptions to feeding. 3. Although adultsdid not appear to modulate food delivery over the nestling period, there was some evidence of short- term adjustment of feeding frequency(but not meal size) according to a chick's immediate nutritional requirements. This suggests that variation in the provisioning rates of chicks did not result solely from stochastic variation in parental foraging success. However, the effect was slight and despite such minoradjustments, the coefficient of variation in daily provisioning ratewas not substantially lower than in other species where the chick has no influence on parental food delivery. This suggests that even among t [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
44. Promoting equity in secondary science and mathematics classrooms with biography projects.
- Author
-
Daisey, Peggy
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,SCIENCE ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Provides a rationale for including biography projects representing diverse contributors to science and mathematics. Description of a project assignment used in a methods course for secondary teacher preparation; Preservice teachers' comments about the assignment; Connections to research about equitable instruction.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Dimensionless life histories and effective population size.
- Author
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Parker, Patricia G.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,MATHEMATICAL models - Published
- 1996
46. Life history and conservation of Totoaba macdonaldi.
- Author
-
Montemayor-Lopez, Gabriela
- Subjects
CONSERVATION of natural resources ,TOTOABA ,BIOGRAPHIES - Published
- 1995
47. Food plants, species composition and variability of the moth community in undisturbed forest
- Author
-
Leps, J., Jaros, J., and Spitzer, K.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,ENTOMOLOGY ,FOOD supply ,MOTHS - Abstract
The present study is based on a 14-yr time series of light trap dataof moths (Lepidoptera) species in an undisturbed alder swamp forest in Central Europe. Vegetation change was followed on five permanent plots. The biomass of all plant species in the portion of the forest surrounding the light trap was determined. As the feeding specificity of all the moth species was known, we were not only able to categorize moth species according to their potential feeding specificity, but were also able to estimate total food supply and its diversity in thestudied ecosystem. In monophagous species, moth population size. characterized by mean annual catch, was positively correlated with food supply, whereas in oligo- and polyphagous species the correlation wasclose to zero. Although the ability of plant species to support a monophagous moth is positively dependent on its biomass, there are somerelatively rare plant species supporting monophagous moths. and somecommon species not supporting monophagous moths. Directional changeswere found both in plant and moth species; directional changes in moth species are more pronounced than changes in plant cover. There is no evidence suggesting that directional changes in moth population sizes are caused by the changes in food supply. Pronounced directional changes were found mainly in species not confined to the closed alderforest and are related to changes in wider areas, in some cases withknown changes in species distribution. Non-directional year-to-year variability, described by Lloyd's index, is best explained by the potential population growth rate of a moth species estimated on the basis of species fecundity. Correlation of Lloyd's index with number of food plant species is significantly positive, but low (r = 0.25); no significant differences were found between categories of feeding specificity. This shows that the dependence of population variability on species feeding specificity, both potential and expressed as number offood pla [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1998
48. Changes in species traits during succession: a search for pattern
- Author
-
Smilauer, P., Pysek, P., and Prach, K.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,PLANT succession - Published
- 1997
49. Meristem allocation: a new classification theory for adaptive strategies in herbaceous plants
- Author
-
Aarssen, I. W. and Bonser, S. P.
- Subjects
ECOLOGY ,PLANTS ,BIOGRAPHIES - Published
- 1996
50. Ephemeral habitats and variation in behavior and life history: comparisons of sibling salamander species
- Author
-
Sih, A. and Maurer, E. F.
- Subjects
BIOGRAPHIES ,HABITATS - Published
- 1996
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