Darwin también era botánico

Auteurs-es

  • Juan Arroyo Marín

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.18002/ambioc.i2009.4969

Mots-clés :

Botánica, Darwin, Charles, 1809-1882,

Résumé

Reivindicación de la figura de Darwin como botánico, muchas veces ignorada por el público en general, además el autor llama la atención sobre la gran deuda que tienen todos los botánicos con él.

Téléchargements

Les données relatives au téléchargement ne sont pas encore disponibles.

Références

Ayres, P. (2008) The aliveness of plants: the Darwins at the dawn of plant science. Pickering and Chatto (Londres).

Berendse, F., Marten, S. (2009) The angiosperm radiation revisited, an ecological explanation for Darwin’s ‘abominable mystery’. Ecology Letters 12: 865–872.

Cesaro, A.C., Thompson, J.D. (2004) Darwin's cross-promotion hypothesis and the evolution of stylar polymorphism. Ecology Letters 7: 1209-1215.

Darwin Correspondence Project. http://www.darwinproject.ac.uk/home.

Duncan, R.P., Williams, P.A. (2002) Darwin's naturalization hypothesis challenged. Nature 417 (6889): 608-609.

Friedman, W.E. (2009) The meaning of Darwin’s abominable mystery. American Journal of Botany 96: 5–21.

Gibson, T.C., Waller, D.M. (2009) Evolving Darwin’s ‘most wonderful’ plant: ecological steps to a snap-trap. New Phytologist 183: 575–587.

Harder, L.D., Johnson, S.D. (2009) Darwin’s beautiful contrivances: evolutionary and functional evidence for floral adaptation. New Phytologist 183: 530–545.

Howard, J.C. (2009) Why didn’t Darwin discover Mendel’s laws? Journal of Biology, 8:15 (doi:10.1186/jbiol123).

Kutschera, U., Briggs, W.R. (2009) From Charles Darwin’s botanical countryhouse studies to modern plant biology. Plant Biology 11: 785–795.

Lambdon, P.W., Hulme, P.E. (2006) How strongly do interactions with closelyrelated native species influence plant invasions? Darwin's naturalization hypothesis assessed on Mediterranean islands. Journal of Biogeography 33: 1116- 1125.

Luo, Z., Zhang, D., Renner, S.S. (2008) Why two kinds of stamens in buzzpollinated flowers? Experimental support for Darwin's division-of-labour hypothesis. Functional Ecology 22: 794-800.

Pannell, J.R. (2009) On the problems of a closed marriage: celebrating Darwin 200. Biology Letters 5: 332-335.

Pauw, A., Stofberg, J., Waterman, R.J. (2009) Flies and flowers in Darwin’s race. Evolution 63: 268–279.

Pérez-Barrales, R., Vargas, P., Arroyo, J. (2006) New evidence for the Darwinian hypothesis of heterostyly: breeding systems and pollinators in Narcissus sect. Apodanthi. New Phytologist 171: 553-567.

Peter, C.I., Johnson, S.D. (2006) Doing the twist: a test of Darwin's crosspollination hypothesis for pollination reconfiguration. Biology Letters 2: 65-68.

Pickersgill, B. (2009) Domestication of plants revisited – Darwin to the present day. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 161: 203–212.

Riba, M., Mayol, M., Giles, B.E., y col. (2009) Darwin's wind hypothesis: does it work for plant dispersal in fragmented habitats? New Phytologist 183: 667-677.

The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online. http://darwin-online.org.uk/

Villagrán, C.A. (2001) Un modelo de la historia de la vegetación de la Cordillera dela Costa de Chile central-sur: la hipótesis glacial de Darwin. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 74: 793-803.

Téléchargements

Publié-e

2018-06-26

Comment citer

Arroyo Marín, J. (2018). Darwin también era botánico. Ambiociencias, (2009), 77–86. https://doi.org/10.18002/ambioc.i2009.4969

Numéro

Rubrique

Áreas de desarrollo de la Biología Evolutiva: impacto de la evolución en el conjunto de las Ciencias Biológicas