Lecture Description
Mating systems and parental care vary tremendously from species to species. Every species differs in how it protects its young from predators and provides its young with food, if it does so at all. The physical environment as well as behavioral dynamics in intraspecies relationships all influence parental care. Often the mating system, which sex is dominant in mating, and whether fertilization is external or internal will determine much of the process of parental care.
Course Description
This course presents the principles of evolution, ecology, and behavior for students beginning their study of biology and of the environment. It discusses major ideas and results in a manner accessible to all Yale College undergraduates. Recent advances have energized these fields with results that have implications well beyond their boundaries: ideas, mechanisms, and processes that should form part of the toolkit of all biologists and educated citizens.
Course Index
- The Nature of Evolution: Selection, Inheritance, and History
- Basic Transmission Genetics
- Adaptive Evolution: Natural Selection
- Neutral Evolution: Genetic Drift
- How Selection Changes the Genetic Composition of Population
- The Origin and Maintenance of Genetic Variation
- The Importance of Development in Evolution
- The Expression of Variation: Reaction Norms
- The Evolution of Sex
- Genomic Conflict
- Life History Evolution
- Sex Allocation
- Sexual Selection
- Species and Speciation
- Phylogeny and Systematics
- Comparative Methods: Trees, Maps, and Traits
- Key Events in Evolution
- Major Events in the Geological Theatre
- The Fossil Record and Life's History
- Coevolution
- Evolutionary Medicine
- The Impact of Evolutionary Thought on the Social Sciences
- The Logic of Science
- Climate and the Distribution of Life on Earth
- Interactions with the Physical Environment
- Population Growth: Density Effects
- Interspecific Competition
- Ecological Communities
- Island Biogeography and Invasive Species
- Energy and Matter in Ecosystems
- Why So Many Species? The Factors Affecting Biodiversity
- Economic Decisions for the Foraging Individual
- Evolutionary Game Theory: Fighting and Contests
- Mating Systems and Parental Care
- Alternative Breeding Strategies
- Selfishness and Altruism