The why and how of species

Biology and Philosophy 3 (4):431-441 (1988)
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Abstract

The biological species concept deals both with the meaning of the sexual species as a harmonious gene pool and with its protection against deleterious outbreeding (effected by isolating mechanisms). According to the Darwin-Muller-Mayr theory isolating mechanisms are acquired by incipient species during alloparty. Isolating mechanisms are not the result of ad hoc selection, but of a change of function of properties acquired during the preceding isolation of the incipient species. The role of behavioral properties (recognition) among the isolating mechanisms has long been recognized and described by naturalists but was rejected as basis of a species definition for a number of valid reasons.

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References found in this work

Animal Species and Evolution.Ernst Mayr - 1963 - Belknap of Harvard University Press.
A critique of the species concept in biology.Th Dobzhansky - 1935 - Philosophy of Science 2 (3):344-355.
Species Concepts and Definitions.Ernst Mayr - 1957 - In The Species Problem. American Association for the Advancement of Science. pp. 1-22.
The Recognition Concept of Species.H. E. H. Paterson - 1985 - In E. Vrba (ed.), Species and Speciation. Transvaal Museum Monograph No. 4. Pretoria.
Essays on Evolution: 1889-1907. [REVIEW]Edmund H. Hollands - 1909 - Philosophical Review 18 (4):449-452.

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