Electrophoretic studies of gene-enzyme systems: Microevolutionary processes and phylogenetic inference
Open Access
- 1 January 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Bolletino di zoologia
- Vol. 47 (sup1) , 95-112
- https://doi.org/10.1080/11250008009438708
Abstract
Electrophoretic studies of gene-enzyme systems: microevolutionary processes and phylogenetic inference Some main contributions to evolutionary population biology and systematics from electrophoretic studies of gene-enzyme systems are reviewed. The following topics are in particular discussed:Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mimicry in the burnet mothZygaena ephialtes: population studies and evidence of a Batesian—Müllerian situationEcological Entomology, 1979
- The Genetics of Speciation in the Rodent Genus PeromyscusEvolution, 1978
- Cladograms, Phylogenetic Trees, and Hypothesis TestingSystematic Zoology, 1977
- Population Genetics and Evolutionary Biology of the Cave Beetle Ptomaphagus hirtusEvolution, 1976
- Hybrid molecules and the superiority of the heterozygoteNature, 1976
- Systematic Value of Electrophoretic DataSystematic Zoology, 1974
- The Hypothesis of Nonspecificity and Taxonomic CongruenceAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1971
- Interspecific Gene Differences and Evolutionary Time Estimated from Electrophoretic Data on Protein IdentityThe American Naturalist, 1971
- A New Approach to Measuring Genetic SimilarityEvolution, 1971
- Enzyme Variants as Markers in the Study of Pre-copulatory Isolating MechanismsNature, 1971