Results 211 to 220 of about 97,434 (258)
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Bacteria–Virus Coevolution

2012
Phages, viruses of bacteria, are ubiquitous. Many phages require host cell death to successfully complete their life cycle, resulting in reciprocal evolution of bacterial resistance and phage infectivity (antagonistic coevolution). Such coevolution can have profound consequences at all levels of biological organisation.
Buckling, Angus, Brockhurst, Michael
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Coevolution

2013
Coevolution, the reciprocal evolutionary change of ecologically interacting species, is a central process shaping the structure of biological communities and affects almost all organisms on earth. Its power as an evolutionary force arises from the often intense selection imposed by interactions between species, and from the fact that other species ...
Michael A. Brockhurst, Kayla C. King
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Coevolution

2017
This chapter seeks to understand how Islamist movements have evolved over time, and, in the process, provide important background on the political and religious contexts of the movements in question. In particular, it shows that Islamist movements coevolve.
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Ecological Species Coevolution

Journal of Biological Systems, 1997
The concepts of evolutionary stable strategies (ESS) and neighborhood invader strategies (NIS) are used to examine the dynamics of coevolving species. When an ESS as well as its near neighbors are ecologically stable and phenotypic space is unconstrained, the strong NIS concept shows that each member of the ESS coalition can always be repelled by some
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Coevolution (socio-biophysical coevolution)

2023
Miquel A. Gual, Richard B. Norgaard
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Concepts of coevolution

Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 1989
The word coevolution has become a standard part of the lexicon of evolutionary biology. More than 1000 papers during the past decade have used coevolution in the title or abstract. Hundreds more have used the word in passing in the body of the paper. A half dozen books now include coevolution in the title. As usage of coevolution has increased, so have
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Coevolution..

Systematic Zoology, 1984
George F. Barrowclough   +2 more
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