Christopher X J. Jensen
Professor, Pratt Institute

Macroevolutionary change: do successful lineages have “evolvability” or “survivability”?

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

PLoS One “Survivability Is More Fundamental Than Evolvability” I want to understand this paper better than I do, but there’s almost no burden of explanation taken on by these authors. I get their main point, but have no clue as to how their model allowed them to arrive at this point. I need to hone Read More

A Minor Post, Macroevolution

Evolution may be too slow: British Columbia begins assisted migration of forests

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

Discover “The Transplanted Forest: A Bold Experiment in Preemptive Climate Adaptation” Given the chances that we will fail to prevent climate change, it seems like the Canadians have the right idea here. Ironic that industries that rely on stable climate are less apt to deny its reality.

A Minor Post, Adaptation, Anthropogenic Change, Articles, Climate Change, Extinction, Habitat Destruction, Public Policy, Resilience, Risk & Uncertainty, Taiga (Boreal Forest), Temperate Forest

Diving bell spider fashions its own scuba tanks

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

io9 “How the diving bell spider uses physics to breathe underwater” Discovery News “Diving Bell Spider Uses Bubble Like Gills“

A Minor Post, Adaptation

Wasps can recognize each other, by face

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

Science “Specialized Face Learning Is Associated with Individual Recognition in Paper Wasps“

A Minor Post, Adaptation, Social Networks

National Geographic goes looking for heat-loving bacteria in a very cold place

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

National Geographic “Life in an Icy Inferno” This is an interesting article from the “great extents to which scientists go to do their work” perspective, but disappointingly it was not all that clear in this article what the purpose of finding thermophilic bacteria in Antarctica might be. I suppose that plenty of NatGeo expeditions can Read More

A Minor Post, Adaptation, Microbial Ecology

National Geographic feature on “Vanishing Languages”

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

National Geographic “Vanishing Languages” I am fascinated and a bit horrified by the process of language extinction described in this article. The parallels with biodiversity loss are obvious and by-and-large appropriate, but I also think that there is something particularly fascinating and tragic about language extinction. It seems as though we are headed towards a Read More

A Minor Post, Cultural Evolution, Memetic Fitness

Shark species may be more cryptic than previously understood

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

Nature News “Shark species more diverse than thought“

A Minor Post, Speciation

Peter Turchin on Steven Pinker’s “Grand Deception” hypotheses

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 0

Social Evolution Forum “The ‘Big Mistake’ and ‘Grand Deception’ Hypotheses: Alternatives to CMLS?” These are flaws in Pinker’s arguments that I failed to identify in my own critique, and Turchin prevents some valuable insights. This idea that the human mind can be so easily parasitized or ‘cuckolded’ by ideas is strange, casting ideas and culture as Read More

A Minor Post, Altruism, Belief, Cooperation, Cultural Evolution, Group Selection, Memetic Fitness, Phenotypic Plasticity, Psychological Adaptation, Web

Steven Pinker makes it clear that he is not a “group selectionist”

Posted 26 Jun 2012 / 5

Frequently I feel like I am listening to an early 2000’s George W. Bush speech when the ‘opponents of group selection’ step up to the podium. Seemingly, you are either “with us or against us” when it comes to considering selection acting at a level above the individual. As someone who is open to thinking Read More

A Major Post, Adaptation, Coevolution, Cultural Evolution, Group Selection, Kin Selection, Memetic Fitness, Multilevel Selection, Natural Selection, Punishment, Web

Are the population dynamics of Dupont’s lark dictated by multilevel selective pressures?

Posted 25 Jun 2012 / 0

A fascinating new paper published this week in the journal PLoS One demonstrates how selection acting at least three different levels produces distinct selective pressures that shape the song behavior of male Dupont’s lark (Chersophilus duponti) in the Ebro Valley of northwestern Spain. Authored by Paola Laiolo and José Ramón Obeso and entitled “Multilevel Selection Read More

A Major Post, Articles, Behavior, Competition, Group Selection, Multilevel Selection, Population Growth