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Title | Island Biogeography - |
Description | Biogeography |
Keywords | spider, biogeography, Caribbean, Indian Ocean, phylogeny, taxonomy |
WebSite | islandbiogeography.org |
Host IP | 199.34.228.100 |
Location | United States |
Site | Rank |
US$2,947,169
Last updated: 2023-05-14 07:41:03
islandbiogeography.org has Semrush global rank of 3,591,347. islandbiogeography.org has an estimated worth of US$ 2,947,169, based on its estimated Ads revenue. islandbiogeography.org receives approximately 340,058 unique visitors each day. Its web server is located in United States, with IP address 199.34.228.100. According to SiteAdvisor, islandbiogeography.org is safe to visit. |
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Yearly Ads Revenue | US$979,367 |
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Menu Island Biogeography Home Blog Project Sites Participants Arachnids Resources Outreach Publications Contribute OVERVIEW The importance of islands in revealing evolutionary processes has been recognized since Darwin’s work on the Galapagos (Darwin, 1909) and Wallace’s work in the Malay Archipelago (Wallace, 1876). Since, island biogeography has provided many elegant examples of the evolutionary mechanisms involved in generating biodiversity, including geological processes and colonization and isolation (Emerson, 2008; Gillespie et al. , 2008a; Parent et al. , 2008). Archipelagos such as Hawaii and the Galapagos (photograph above) provide examples where cycles of evolutionary radiation have produced replicated patterns of endemic, often bizarre, forms (Cowie & Holland, 2008; Dunbar-Co et al. , 2008; Parent et al. , 2008). Yet, the extreme isolation of these islands reduces the interplay between islands and continents—interchange is one-way (islands as sinks) and limited to rare |
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