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Joan Roughgarden

Joan Roughgarden (born 13 March 1946) is an American ecologist and evolutionary biologist. She has engaged in theory and observation of coevolution and competition in Anolis lizards of the Caribbean, and recruitment limitation in the rocky intertidal zones of California and Oregon. She has more recently become known for her rejection of sexual selection, her theistic evolutionism, and her work on holobiont evolution.

Joan Roughgarden
Born (1946-03-13) 13 March 1946 (age 78)
Alma materUniversity of Rochester
Known forCritiques of sexual selection, theory of social selection
Scientific career
FieldsEcology and evolutionary biology
InstitutionsUniversity of Massachusetts Boston
Stanford University
Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology
ThesisImplications of density dependent natural selection (1971)

Personal life and education edit

Roughgarden was born in Paterson, New Jersey, United States. She received a Bachelor of Science in biology (with Distinction and Phi Beta Kappa) and a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy with highest honors from University of Rochester in 1968 and later a Ph.D. in biology from Harvard University in 1971. In 1998, Roughgarden came out as transgender and changed her name to Joan, making a coming out post on her website on her 52nd birthday.[1]

Career edit

Roughgarden worked as an instructor and Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of Massachusetts Boston from 1970 to 1972. In 1972 she joined the faculty of the Department of Biology at Stanford University. After becoming full professor she retired in 2011, and became Emeritus Professor. She founded and directed the Earth Systems Program at Stanford and has received awards for service to undergraduate education. In 2012 she moved to Hawaii, where she became an adjunct professor at the Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology. In her academic career, Roughgarden advised 20 Ph.D. students and 15 postdoctoral fellows.[2]

Roughgarden has authored books and over 180 scientific articles. In addition to a textbook on ecological and evolutionary theory in 1979, Roughgarden has carried out ecological field studies with Caribbean lizards and with barnacles and their larvae along the California coast. In 2015, she wrote the fiction novel Ram-2050, a science-fiction retelling of the Ramayana.

Research edit

Caribbean Anoles & Interspecific Competition edit

Roughgarden's early work in the 1970s and 80s helped to develop the Anolis lizards of the Caribbean as an important model system for evolution and ecology. For example, she used two-species enclosure experiments on two Caribbean islands to demonstrate increasing strength of interspecific competition as resource partitioning decreases:[3] a central tenet for competition theory. The Anolis system thus provided an early example of an eco-evolutionary feedback,[4] and with further development by Jonathan Losos and others, has become an important example of adaptive radiation.

Barnacles & Recruitment Limitation edit

After setting up a lab at the Hopkins Marine Station, Roughgarden sought to extend her approach of combining theoretical with field research by studying intertidal acorn barnacles (Balanus and Chthamalus spp). Earlier work by Joseph Connell, Bob Paine and others had suggested that the characteristic zonation of rocky intertidal communities was predominantly structured by predation,[5] (for example by Pisaster seastars) and by competition,[6][7] wherein dominant Balanus species displaced Chthamalus species to the high intertidal zones. Together with her student, Steve Gaines, Roughgarden showed that these interspecific interactions were most important in intertidal localities and communities with a high density of barnacles, such as those Connell and others had studied in Scotland.[6][8] At Hopkins in Central California, however, barnacle density was lower, and the amount of free space was best explained by periodic pulses of larval recruitment.[8]  With her student Sean Connolly, she then showed, through both empirical observation and modeling, that a latitudinal gradient in upwelling along the west coast of North America created very dense barnacle recruitment in the north (Oregon and Washington), where upwelling was weak, and very sparse barnacle recruitment in the south (California), where upwelling was strong.[9] This in turn explained why field studies in the north had found interspecific interactions to be important, while her own field studies in the south had found larval recruitment to be most important for structuring intertidal populations.[10] This deft synthesis helped to drive a paradigm shift in marine ecology which emphasized larval dispersal and recruitment dynamics over adult interactions and favored demographic models of populations open to larval recruits from distant localities, which dominated the field during the 1990s.[11]

Criticism of sexual selection edit

Around the time of her transition, Roughgarden began to shift her research focus to Darwin’s theory of sexual selection. In her 2004 book, Evolution’s Rainbow,[12] Roughgarden analyzes how biology can influence human sexuality and gender identity and explores the substantial diversity of mating systems and sexuality throughout the animal kingdom, with an eye toward understanding human sexual categories like gay, lesbian, and trans. In this book, and other articles around the same time, she offered criticism of sexual selection theory[13][14][15] by providing examples of species that depart from its predictions (such as homosexual behavior in bonobos, elephants and lizards) as well as highlighting contradictions between population genetic theory and sexual selection theory. She also provided the beginnings of an alternative theory to sexual selection called social selection, which she describes as being focused on natural selection based on differential offspring production, where sexual selection is focused on differential mating success.

A 2006 article in the journal Science with her student Erol Akçay, and Meeko Oishi, formally presented the theory of social selection in terms of game theory.[16] Beyond the Nash Competitive Equilibrium (NCE) imported to evolutionary biology by John Maynard Smith as the Evolutionary Stable Strategy, Roughgarden et al. discuss the Nash Bargaining Solution (NBS), which exists as an alternative to the NCE that is reached through negotiation. When playing in developmental time (as opposed to evolutionary time), a game player that stands to lose individual fitness at an NCE relative to its competitor may establish a threat point by promising to play a sub-optimal strategy. Through negotiation, for example via a side payment, the players can arrive at an NBS through playing mixed strategies across repeated games which thereby maximizes the fitness of the cooperative "team" (which consists of both players) rather than to any one player. Roughgarden et al. provide several examples of what such cooperative game play would look like in nature, and then define the evolutionary theory of social selection as one which considers such cooperative team games in the developmental tier as the primitive state, with sexual conflict as the derived state. They argue that social selection theory is mutually exclusive with the evolutionary theory of sexual selection, which treats sexual conflict as the primitive state and sexual cooperation as derived.

Following the Science paper, forty scientists produced ten critical letters[17][18] stating that the article was misleading, that it contained misunderstandings and misrepresentations, that sexual selection accounted for all the data presented and subsumed Roughgarden's theoretical analysis, and that sexual selection explained data that her theory could not.[17][18] Troy Day stated that "many people felt that this was completely shoddy science and poor scholarship, all motivated by a personal agenda".[17] Roughgarden stated she was "not altogether surprised" by the volume of dissent and that her theory was not an extension of sexual selection theory.[17][18]

Tim Clutton-Brock of Oxford University wrote a more detailed rebuttal in Science in 2007,[19] in which he concedes the point that males can engage in sexual selection on females, even in species where the operational sex ratio is biased towards males, stating: "Consequently, satisfactory explanations of the evolution of sex differences requires an understanding of the operation of sexual selection in females as well as males".[19] Nevertheless, Clutton-Brock concludes that sexual selection is a robust theoretical framework, without ever addressing the theoretical distinction in the polarity of intersexual cooperation and conflict highlighted by Roughgarden et al.[16]

In her 2009 book The Genial Gene,[20] Roughgarden continues to build a case against sexual selection theory and to present social selection theory as an alternative. The book is titled as a response to the popular book, The Selfish Gene, by Richard Dawkins,[21] which expounds what Roughgarden describes a “neo-Spencerian” view of nature “red in tooth and claw” in which competition and conflict dominate. In The Genial Gene, after an initial section defining and attacking sexual selection, followed by a definition of social selection as one based on differences in offspring-production, rather than differences in mating success.

A second section is focused on the genetic basis of social selection. The first chapter addresses how sexual reproduction evolved in the first place, and makes the case for Roughgarden’s Portfolio hypothesis, which emphasizes that sexual reproduction creates genetic diversity through recombination, as opposed to the more commonly favored Muller’s Ratchet, which emphasizes that sex removes deleterious mutations through recombination. The second chapter explains the binary distribution of gamete types (sperm vs. egg) as a strategy to maximize gametic contact, rather than as a result of conflicting gametic strategies. A final chapter argues that hermaphroditism, rather than gonochorism, is the primitive state of sexuality.

The third section takes a two-tier approach to developing social selection theory. A behavioral tier focuses on game theory and Nash Bargaining Solutions as outlined in her 2006 paper.[16] A second population genetic tier is then described that operates as a result of many replays of the behavioral tier.  The book concludes by listing 26 phenomena that, according to Roughgarden, are explained differently by sexual selection theory and are better explained by social selection theory. She says that sexual selection theory derives from a view of natural behavior predicated on the selfish-gene concept, competition and deception, whereas the social-selection theory derives from teamwork, honesty, and genetic equality. As of 2012 she has continued to study if social selection as opposed to sexual selection is a more important driver of evolution for colonial species such as corals or perhaps humans.[22][23]

Roughgarden's criticism of sexual selection has been rejected by the scientific community, and her papers on it have received few citations in scientific literature.[24] In a 2019 interview, she stated that "Most biologists remain defensive of sexual selection theory”.[15]

In 2013, Roughgarden funded a Catalysis meeting at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center with the goal of debating and reviewing "the status of sexual selection studies and to indicate challenges and future directions".[25] The group struggled to come to a consensus definition of sexual selection, but a subgroup offered a definition that for the first time explicitly differentiated fecundity selection for sexual selection sensu stricto.[25]

Theistic evolution edit

Roughgarden has written on the relationship between Christianity and science.[26] Her book Evolution and Christian Faith: Reflections of an Evolutionary Biologist presents scripture passages that emphasize her belief that the Bible does not conflict with evolutionary biology and relates Christianity and evolution by asserting that all life is interconnected, as members of a faith community are connected. Roughgarden opposes creationism and intelligent design, but asserts her belief in God's involvement in evolution.[27] She was a speaker at the Beyond Belief symposium in 2006.[28]

Holobiont Evolution edit

As professor emerita, Dr. Roughgarden turned her attention to the emerging concept of the holobiont, which she defined as “an animal or plant host together with all the microbes living on or in it, exosymbionts and endosymbionts, respectively.[29]” The concept, which originated in 1943, has had increasing recognition with the rise of second and third-generation DNA sequencing methods that allow the microbial communities (i.e. the microbiome) of a host to be examined. The close association between the microbiome and its host has led many[30][31][32]  to suggest that the holobiont may be an evolutionary unit of selection, in which the combination of the host’s genes with those of its microbiome produce an extended genome, or hologenome. However, the hologenome concept has been criticized on the grounds that microbiomes are usually not vertically transmitted from parent to child,[33] thereby violating what is commonly thought to be one of the key principles of natural selection: variation inherited in a Mendelian fashion.

Together with other proponents of the holobiont concept, Roughgarden wrote a 2018 review of the topic[29] in which they examined the evidence for the holobiont as a biological entity. They considered the tight integration of physiological, developmental, reproductive and even immunological components between host and microbial symbionts to provide a foundation for this concept. For example mammalian mothers’ milk contains sugars that appear to be for the benefit of the microbial symbionts, because they cannot be metabolized by the newborn.[34]  They also cite the horizontal acquisition of DNA coding for syncytin,[35] a protein that allows formation of the placenta, as a key step in the evolution of placental mammals, which also demonstrates adaptive evolution in the holobiont.

In this review,[29] Roughgarden begins to sketch a population genetic model of holobiont evolution, containing a host species, and a single microbial symbiont, and in which selection is based only on the number of copies of the symbiont genome acquired by the host. The model contains three sequential processes per generation: microbes can move between hosts, they can proliferate within hosts and holobionts can survive or perish dependent on the number of symbionts acquired. This model was enough to show that, with vertical transmission, a deleterious symbiont will reduce the number of holobionts (and symbionts), while a beneficial symbiont will tend to increase the sizes of both groups. However, horizontal transmission “binds the collection of microbiomes into a unified system, a meta-community, rather than a collection of independent communities”.

Roughgarden followed this review with two papers[36][37] that further fleshed out her model of holobiont evolution. The first[36] showed that, when microbes colonize hosts following a Poisson distribution, horizontal transmission can still lead to holobiont evolution when beneficial symbionts increase the success of their hosts and thus flood the microbial source pool (the converse case with parasitic microbes also holds true). She calls this phenomenon “collective inheritance” as opposed to lineal Mendelian inheritance. The second paper[37] adds a second microbial species to the model, as well as a “colonization parameter” d, which partially determines the Poisson rate parameter. The d parameter approximates the density of the symbiont strain around the host, or the host’s selectivity for the symbiont species, depending on context. Because microbial colonization of the host follows a Poisson distribution, there is no Hardy-Weinberg analog, and directional selection tends to be more diffuse than expectated under vertical transmission. She then reasons from this two-microbe model that the host is likely to use antibodies and “probodies” to modulate d for each microbial species, in effect orchestrating things so that only microbes that provide some minimum amount of altruism toward their host are allowed to remain in symbiosis with the host. From the microbe’s standpoint, those species that provide the minimum amount of altruism to clear the host’s threshold will tend to outcompete those that provide more. This paper[37] carefully demonstrates that this host-orchestrated species selection process is conceptually distinct from co-evolution or multi-level selection and can predict and explain the tight integration of hosts and their microbial symbionts found throughout the eukaryotic tree of life.

Awards and honors edit

  • Stonewall Book Award, 2005
  • Center Fellow, National Center for Ecological Synthesis and Analysis, University of California (Santa Barbara), 1998
  • Dinkelspiel Award for Undergraduate Teaching, Stanford University,[38] in 1995
  • Visiting Research Fellow at the Merton College, University of Oxford, in 1994
  • Elected Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1993
  • Fellow of Guggenheim Foundation in 1985
  • University Fellow, Stanford University in 1978

Roughgarden has served as associate editor of several academic journals, including Philosophy and Theory in Biology (since 2008), American Naturalist (1984–1989), Oecologia (1979–1982), and Theoretical Population Biology (1975–1986). She was the vice-chair and Chair of Theoretical Ecology Section of the Ecological Society of America during 2002–2003. She has served on the Nonprofit Organization Board for the Oceanic Society (San Francisco), the EPA Science Advisory Board Committee on Valuating the Protection of Ecological Systems and Services, and the science advisory boards of the Pacific Ocean Conservation Network (California), and the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary (Santa Barbara).[39]

Selected bibliography edit

  • Roughgarden, Joan (Spring 2007). "Challenging Darwin's theory of sexual selection". Daedalus. 136 (2): 23–36. doi:10.1162/daed.2007.136.2.23. S2CID 57571279.
  • Roughgarden, J. The Genial Gene: Deconstructing Darwinian Selfishness. Hardcover ed. University of California Press, 2009 ISBN 978-0-520-25826-6
  • Roughgarden, J. Evolution and Christian Faith: Reflections of an Evolutionary Biologist. Hardcover ed. Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 2006. ISBN 1-59726-098-3
  • Roughgarden, J. Evolution's Rainbow: Diversity, Gender and Sexuality in Nature and People. Berkeley CA: Univ. of California Press, 2004. ISBN 0-520-24073-1
  • Roughgarden, J. Primer of Ecological Theory. 1st ed. Prentice Hall, 1997.
  • Roughgarden, J. Anolis Lizards of the Caribbean: Ecology, Evolution and Plate Tectonics. Hardcover ed. Oxford Univ. Press, 1995.
  • Roughgarden, J, May, R. M., and Levin, S. A. (eds.). Perspectives in Ecological Theory. Oxford Univ. Press, 1995.
  • Ehrlich, Paul R.; Roughgarden, Jonathan (1987). Science of Ecology. Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0023317002.
  • Roughgarden, J. Theory of Population Genetics and Evolutionary Ecology: an Introduction. 1st ed. Prentice Hall, 1979.
  • Simpson, Layne A. Gender and Society, vol. 19, no. 3, 2005, pp. 425–426. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/30044605.

References edit

  1. ^ Yoon, Carol Kaesuk (October 17, 2000). "Scientist at Work: Joan Roughgarden; A Theorist With Personal Experience Of the Divide Between the Sexes". The New York Times. Retrieved March 7, 2014.
  2. ^ "Curriculum Vitae: Joan Roughgarden". Stanford University. Retrieved March 7, 2014.
  3. ^ Pacala, Stephen W.; Roughgarden, Jonathan (1985). "Population Experiments with the Anolis Lizards of St. Maarten and St. Eustatius". Ecology. 66 (1): 129–141. Bibcode:1985Ecol...66..129P. doi:10.2307/1941313. ISSN 1939-9170. JSTOR 1941313.
  4. ^ Post, David M.; Palkovacs, Eric P. (June 12, 2009). "Eco-evolutionary feedbacks in community and ecosystem ecology: interactions between the ecological theatre and the evolutionary play". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 364 (1523): 1629–1640. doi:10.1098/rstb.2009.0012. ISSN 0962-8436. PMC 2690506. PMID 19414476.
  5. ^ Paine, Robert T.; Vadas, Robert L. (1969). "The Effects of Grazing by Sea Urchins, Strongylocentrotus spp., on Benthic Algal Populations". Limnology and Oceanography. 14 (5): 710–719. Bibcode:1969LimOc..14..710P. doi:10.4319/lo.1969.14.5.0710.
  6. ^ a b Connell, Joseph H. (1961). "The Influence of Interspecific Competition and Other Factors on the Distribution of the Barnacle Chthamalus Stellatus". Ecology. 42 (4): 710–723. Bibcode:1961Ecol...42..710C. doi:10.2307/1933500. ISSN 0012-9658. JSTOR 1933500.
  7. ^ Connell, Joseph H. (1961). "Effects of Competition, Predation by Thais lapillus, and Other Factors on Natural Populations of the Barnacle Balanus balanoides". Ecological Monographs. 31 (1): 61–104. Bibcode:1961EcoM...31...61C. doi:10.2307/1950746. ISSN 0012-9615. JSTOR 1950746.
  8. ^ a b Gaines, S.; Roughgarden, J. (June 1, 1985). "Larval settlement rate: A leading determinant of structure in an ecological community of the marine intertidal zone". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 82 (11): 3707–3711. Bibcode:1985PNAS...82.3707G. doi:10.1073/pnas.82.11.3707. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 397856. PMID 16593571.
  9. ^ Connolly, Sean R.; Roughgarden, Jonathan (April 1, 1998). "A Latitudinal Gradient in Northeast Pacific Intertidal Community Structure: Evidence for an Oceanographically Based Synthesis of Marine Community Theory". The American Naturalist. 151 (4): 311–326. doi:10.1086/286121. ISSN 0003-0147. PMID 18811323. S2CID 23831003.
  10. ^ Connolly, Sean R.; Roughgarden, Joan (1999). "Theory of Marine Communities: Competition, Predation, and Recruitment-Dependent Interaction Strength". Ecological Monographs. 69 (3): 277–296. doi:10.1890/0012-9615(1999)069[0277:tomccp]2.0.co;2. ISSN 0012-9615.
  11. ^ Caley, M. J.; Carr, M. H.; Hixon, M. A.; Hughes, T. P.; Jones, G. P.; Menge, B. A. (1996). . Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 27 (1): 477–500. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.27.1.477. ISSN 0066-4162. Archived from the original on January 31, 2022. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
  12. ^ Roughgarden, Joan (2013). Evolution's rainbow : diversity, gender, and sexuality in nature and people (Tenth anniversary ed.). Berkeley. ISBN 978-0-520-95797-8. OCLC 861528157.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ Moser, Bob. "On the Originality of Species". Stanford Magazine. No. May/June 2004. Stanford University. Retrieved June 13, 2021.
  14. ^ Jonah Lehrer. "The Effeminate Sheep". Seed (June/July 2006). Reprinted in Richard Preston, ed. (2007). The Best American Science and Nature Writing. New York: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-618-72231-0.
  15. ^ a b . MIT Press. February 11, 2019. Archived from the original on June 13, 2021. Retrieved June 13, 2021.
  16. ^ a b c Roughgarden, Joan; Oishi, Meeko; Akçay, Erol (February 17, 2006). "Reproductive Social Behavior: Cooperative Games to Replace Sexual Selection". Science. 311 (5763): 965–969. Bibcode:2006Sci...311..965R. doi:10.1126/science.1110105. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 16484485. S2CID 32364112.
  17. ^ a b c d Atkinson, Nick (May 5, 2006). "Sexual selection alternative slammed". The Scientist. from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved May 15, 2007.
  18. ^ a b c Dall, S. R. X.; McNamara, J. M.; Wedell, N.; Hosken, D. J. (May 5, 2006). "Debating Sexual Selection and Mating Strategies" (PDF). Science. 312 (5774): 689b–697b. doi:10.1126/science.312.5774.689b. PMID 16675684. S2CID 10887773. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
  19. ^ a b Clutton-Brock, Tim (December 21, 2007). "Sexual Selection in Males and Females". Science. 318 (5858): 1882–1885. Bibcode:2007Sci...318.1882C. doi:10.1126/science.1133311. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 18096798. S2CID 6883765.
  20. ^ Roughgarden, Joan (2009). The genial gene : deconstructing Darwinian selfishness. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25826-6. OCLC 264039560.
  21. ^ Dawkins, Richard. The selfish gene. OCLC 1238007082.
  22. ^ Folse HJ, 3rd; Roughgarden, J (2010). "What is an individual organism? A multilevel selection perspective". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 85 (4): 447–72. doi:10.1086/656905. PMID 21243964. S2CID 19816447.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  23. ^ Roughgarden, J. (2012). "The social selection alternative to sexual selection". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 367 (1600): 2294–2303. doi:10.1098/rstb.2011.0282. PMC 3391423. PMID 22777017.
  24. ^ Allen, Arthur (May 1, 2014). "Sexual Selection's Mystique Lingers". BioScience. 64 (5): 375–380. doi:10.1093/biosci/biu047. ISSN 0006-3568.
  25. ^ a b Roughgarden, Joan; Adkins-Regan, Elizabeth; Akçay, Erol; Crawford, Jeremy Chase; Gadagkar, Raghavendra; Griffith, Simon C.; Hinde, Camilla A.; Hoquet, Thierry; O’Connor, Cailin; Prokop, Zofia M.; Prum, Richard O. (January 10, 2015), Sexual selection studies: a NESCent catalyst meeting, doi:10.7287/peerj.preprints.680v3, S2CID 14039177
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on October 8, 2007. Retrieved September 19, 2006.
  27. ^ Roughgarden, Joan. Evolution and Christian Faith: Reflections of an Evolutionary Biologist. Washington D.C.: Island Press, 2006.
  28. ^ "TSN: Beyond Belief: Science, Reason, Religion & Survival". thesciencenetwork.org. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  29. ^ a b c Roughgarden, Joan; Gilbert, Scott F.; Rosenberg, Eugene; Zilber-Rosenberg, Ilana; Lloyd, Elisabeth A. (2018). "Holobionts as Units of Selection and a Model of Their Population Dynamics and Evolution". Biological Theory. 13 (1): 44–65. doi:10.1007/s13752-017-0287-1. ISSN 1555-5542. S2CID 256282704.
  30. ^ Bordenstein, Seth R.; Theis, Kevin R. (August 18, 2015). "Host Biology in Light of the Microbiome: Ten Principles of Holobionts and Hologenomes". PLOS Biology. 13 (8): e1002226. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1002226. ISSN 1545-7885. PMC 4540581. PMID 26284777.
  31. ^ Rosenberg, Eugene; Zilber-Rosenberg, Ilana (May 4, 2016). Collier, R. John (ed.). "Microbes Drive Evolution of Animals and Plants: the Hologenome Concept". mBio. 7 (2): e01395. doi:10.1128/mBio.01395-15. ISSN 2161-2129. PMC 4817260. PMID 27034283.
  32. ^ Gilbert, Scott F.; Sapp, Jan; Tauber, Alfred I. (2012). "A Symbiotic View of Life: We Have Never Been Individuals". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 87 (4): 325–341. doi:10.1086/668166. ISSN 0033-5770. PMID 23397797. S2CID 14279096.
  33. ^ Moran, Nancy A.; Sloan, Daniel B. (December 4, 2015). "The Hologenome Concept: Helpful or Hollow?". PLOS Biology. 13 (12): e1002311. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.1002311. ISSN 1545-7885. PMC 4670207. PMID 26636661.
  34. ^ Yoshida, Erina; Sakurama, Haruko; Kiyohara, Masashi; Nakajima, Masahiro; Kitaoka, Motomitsu; Ashida, Hisashi; Hirose, Junko; Katayama, Takane; Yamamoto, Kenji; Kumagai, Hidehiko (September 16, 2011). "Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis uses two different β-galactosidases for selectively degrading type-1 and type-2 human milk oligosaccharides". Glycobiology. 22 (3): 361–368. doi:10.1093/glycob/cwr116. ISSN 1460-2423. PMID 21926104.
  35. ^ Dupressoir, A.; Lavialle, C.; Heidmann, T. (2012). "From ancestral infectious retroviruses to bona fide cellular genes: Role of the captured syncytins in placentation". Placenta. 33 (9): 663–671. doi:10.1016/j.placenta.2012.05.005. ISSN 0143-4004. PMID 22695103.
  36. ^ a b Roughgarden, Joan (March 2, 2020). "Holobiont Evolution: Mathematical Model with Vertical vs. Horizontal Microbiome Transmission". Philosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology. 12 (20220112). doi:10.3998/ptpbio.16039257.0012.002. hdl:2027/spo.16039257.0012.002. ISSN 2475-3025. S2CID 216329421.
  37. ^ a b c Roughgarden, Joan (June 1, 2023). "Holobiont Evolution: Population Theory for the Hologenome". The American Naturalist. 201 (6): 763–778. doi:10.1086/723782. ISSN 0003-0147. PMID 37229712. S2CID 220253227.
  38. ^ "Lloyd W. Dinkelspiel Awards | Registrar's Office". registrar.stanford.edu. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  39. ^ . California Science Center. Archived from the original on July 13, 2010.

External links edit

  • Joan Roughgarden profile – Stanford Univ.
  • Joan Roughgarden 50-min interv. – Web Radio (Gender Talk)
  • Video (with mp3 available) of conversation with Roughgarden and Robert Wright on Bloggingheads.tv

joan, roughgarden, born, march, 1946, american, ecologist, evolutionary, biologist, engaged, theory, observation, coevolution, competition, anolis, lizards, caribbean, recruitment, limitation, rocky, intertidal, zones, california, oregon, more, recently, becom. Joan Roughgarden born 13 March 1946 is an American ecologist and evolutionary biologist She has engaged in theory and observation of coevolution and competition in Anolis lizards of the Caribbean and recruitment limitation in the rocky intertidal zones of California and Oregon She has more recently become known for her rejection of sexual selection her theistic evolutionism and her work on holobiont evolution Joan RoughgardenBorn 1946 03 13 13 March 1946 age 78 Paterson New Jersey U S Alma materUniversity of RochesterKnown forCritiques of sexual selection theory of social selectionScientific careerFieldsEcology and evolutionary biologyInstitutionsUniversity of Massachusetts BostonStanford UniversityHawaiʻi Institute of Marine BiologyThesisImplications of density dependent natural selection 1971 Contents 1 Personal life and education 2 Career 3 Research 3 1 Caribbean Anoles amp Interspecific Competition 3 2 Barnacles amp Recruitment Limitation 3 3 Criticism of sexual selection 3 4 Theistic evolution 3 5 Holobiont Evolution 4 Awards and honors 5 Selected bibliography 6 References 7 External linksPersonal life and education editRoughgarden was born in Paterson New Jersey United States She received a Bachelor of Science in biology with Distinction and Phi Beta Kappa and a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy with highest honors from University of Rochester in 1968 and later a Ph D in biology from Harvard University in 1971 In 1998 Roughgarden came out as transgender and changed her name to Joan making a coming out post on her website on her 52nd birthday 1 Career editRoughgarden worked as an instructor and Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of Massachusetts Boston from 1970 to 1972 In 1972 she joined the faculty of the Department of Biology at Stanford University After becoming full professor she retired in 2011 and became Emeritus Professor She founded and directed the Earth Systems Program at Stanford and has received awards for service to undergraduate education In 2012 she moved to Hawaii where she became an adjunct professor at the Hawaiʻi Institute of Marine Biology In her academic career Roughgarden advised 20 Ph D students and 15 postdoctoral fellows 2 Roughgarden has authored books and over 180 scientific articles In addition to a textbook on ecological and evolutionary theory in 1979 Roughgarden has carried out ecological field studies with Caribbean lizards and with barnacles and their larvae along the California coast In 2015 she wrote the fiction novel Ram 2050 a science fiction retelling of the Ramayana Research editCaribbean Anoles amp Interspecific Competition edit Roughgarden s early work in the 1970s and 80s helped to develop the Anolis lizards of the Caribbean as an important model system for evolution and ecology For example she used two species enclosure experiments on two Caribbean islands to demonstrate increasing strength of interspecific competition as resource partitioning decreases 3 a central tenet for competition theory The Anolis system thus provided an early example of an eco evolutionary feedback 4 and with further development by Jonathan Losos and others has become an important example of adaptive radiation Barnacles amp Recruitment Limitation edit After setting up a lab at the Hopkins Marine Station Roughgarden sought to extend her approach of combining theoretical with field research by studying intertidal acorn barnacles Balanus and Chthamalus spp Earlier work by Joseph Connell Bob Paine and others had suggested that the characteristic zonation of rocky intertidal communities was predominantly structured by predation 5 for example by Pisaster seastars and by competition 6 7 wherein dominant Balanus species displaced Chthamalus species to the high intertidal zones Together with her student Steve Gaines Roughgarden showed that these interspecific interactions were most important in intertidal localities and communities with a high density of barnacles such as those Connell and others had studied in Scotland 6 8 At Hopkins in Central California however barnacle density was lower and the amount of free space was best explained by periodic pulses of larval recruitment 8 With her student Sean Connolly she then showed through both empirical observation and modeling that a latitudinal gradient in upwelling along the west coast of North America created very dense barnacle recruitment in the north Oregon and Washington where upwelling was weak and very sparse barnacle recruitment in the south California where upwelling was strong 9 This in turn explained why field studies in the north had found interspecific interactions to be important while her own field studies in the south had found larval recruitment to be most important for structuring intertidal populations 10 This deft synthesis helped to drive a paradigm shift in marine ecology which emphasized larval dispersal and recruitment dynamics over adult interactions and favored demographic models of populations open to larval recruits from distant localities which dominated the field during the 1990s 11 Criticism of sexual selection edit Around the time of her transition Roughgarden began to shift her research focus to Darwin s theory of sexual selection In her 2004 book Evolution s Rainbow 12 Roughgarden analyzes how biology can influence human sexuality and gender identity and explores the substantial diversity of mating systems and sexuality throughout the animal kingdom with an eye toward understanding human sexual categories like gay lesbian and trans In this book and other articles around the same time she offered criticism of sexual selection theory 13 14 15 by providing examples of species that depart from its predictions such as homosexual behavior in bonobos elephants and lizards as well as highlighting contradictions between population genetic theory and sexual selection theory She also provided the beginnings of an alternative theory to sexual selection called social selection which she describes as being focused on natural selection based on differential offspring production where sexual selection is focused on differential mating success A 2006 article in the journal Science with her student Erol Akcay and Meeko Oishi formally presented the theory of social selection in terms of game theory 16 Beyond the Nash Competitive Equilibrium NCE imported to evolutionary biology by John Maynard Smith as the Evolutionary Stable Strategy Roughgarden et al discuss the Nash Bargaining Solution NBS which exists as an alternative to the NCE that is reached through negotiation When playing in developmental time as opposed to evolutionary time a game player that stands to lose individual fitness at an NCE relative to its competitor may establish a threat point by promising to play a sub optimal strategy Through negotiation for example via a side payment the players can arrive at an NBS through playing mixed strategies across repeated games which thereby maximizes the fitness of the cooperative team which consists of both players rather than to any one player Roughgarden et al provide several examples of what such cooperative game play would look like in nature and then define the evolutionary theory of social selection as one which considers such cooperative team games in the developmental tier as the primitive state with sexual conflict as the derived state They argue that social selection theory is mutually exclusive with the evolutionary theory of sexual selection which treats sexual conflict as the primitive state and sexual cooperation as derived Following the Science paper forty scientists produced ten critical letters 17 18 stating that the article was misleading that it contained misunderstandings and misrepresentations that sexual selection accounted for all the data presented and subsumed Roughgarden s theoretical analysis and that sexual selection explained data that her theory could not 17 18 Troy Day stated that many people felt that this was completely shoddy science and poor scholarship all motivated by a personal agenda 17 Roughgarden stated she was not altogether surprised by the volume of dissent and that her theory was not an extension of sexual selection theory 17 18 Tim Clutton Brock of Oxford University wrote a more detailed rebuttal in Science in 2007 19 in which he concedes the point that males can engage in sexual selection on females even in species where the operational sex ratio is biased towards males stating Consequently satisfactory explanations of the evolution of sex differences requires an understanding of the operation of sexual selection in females as well as males 19 Nevertheless Clutton Brock concludes that sexual selection is a robust theoretical framework without ever addressing the theoretical distinction in the polarity of intersexual cooperation and conflict highlighted by Roughgarden et al 16 In her 2009 book The Genial Gene 20 Roughgarden continues to build a case against sexual selection theory and to present social selection theory as an alternative The book is titled as a response to the popular book The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins 21 which expounds what Roughgarden describes a neo Spencerian view of nature red in tooth and claw in which competition and conflict dominate In The Genial Gene after an initial section defining and attacking sexual selection followed by a definition of social selection as one based on differences in offspring production rather than differences in mating success A second section is focused on the genetic basis of social selection The first chapter addresses how sexual reproduction evolved in the first place and makes the case for Roughgarden s Portfolio hypothesis which emphasizes that sexual reproduction creates genetic diversity through recombination as opposed to the more commonly favored Muller s Ratchet which emphasizes that sex removes deleterious mutations through recombination The second chapter explains the binary distribution of gamete types sperm vs egg as a strategy to maximize gametic contact rather than as a result of conflicting gametic strategies A final chapter argues that hermaphroditism rather than gonochorism is the primitive state of sexuality The third section takes a two tier approach to developing social selection theory A behavioral tier focuses on game theory and Nash Bargaining Solutions as outlined in her 2006 paper 16 A second population genetic tier is then described that operates as a result of many replays of the behavioral tier The book concludes by listing 26 phenomena that according to Roughgarden are explained differently by sexual selection theory and are better explained by social selection theory She says that sexual selection theory derives from a view of natural behavior predicated on the selfish gene concept competition and deception whereas the social selection theory derives from teamwork honesty and genetic equality As of 2012 she has continued to study if social selection as opposed to sexual selection is a more important driver of evolution for colonial species such as corals or perhaps humans 22 23 Roughgarden s criticism of sexual selection has been rejected by the scientific community and her papers on it have received few citations in scientific literature 24 In a 2019 interview she stated that Most biologists remain defensive of sexual selection theory 15 In 2013 Roughgarden funded a Catalysis meeting at the National Evolutionary Synthesis Center with the goal of debating and reviewing the status of sexual selection studies and to indicate challenges and future directions 25 The group struggled to come to a consensus definition of sexual selection but a subgroup offered a definition that for the first time explicitly differentiated fecundity selection for sexual selection sensu stricto 25 Theistic evolution edit Roughgarden has written on the relationship between Christianity and science 26 Her book Evolution and Christian Faith Reflections of an Evolutionary Biologist presents scripture passages that emphasize her belief that the Bible does not conflict with evolutionary biology and relates Christianity and evolution by asserting that all life is interconnected as members of a faith community are connected Roughgarden opposes creationism and intelligent design but asserts her belief in God s involvement in evolution 27 She was a speaker at the Beyond Belief symposium in 2006 28 Holobiont Evolution edit As professor emerita Dr Roughgarden turned her attention to the emerging concept of the holobiont which she defined as an animal or plant host together with all the microbes living on or in it exosymbionts and endosymbionts respectively 29 The concept which originated in 1943 has had increasing recognition with the rise of second and third generation DNA sequencing methods that allow the microbial communities i e the microbiome of a host to be examined The close association between the microbiome and its host has led many 30 31 32 to suggest that the holobiont may be an evolutionary unit of selection in which the combination of the host s genes with those of its microbiome produce an extended genome or hologenome However the hologenome concept has been criticized on the grounds that microbiomes are usually not vertically transmitted from parent to child 33 thereby violating what is commonly thought to be one of the key principles of natural selection variation inherited in a Mendelian fashion Together with other proponents of the holobiont concept Roughgarden wrote a 2018 review of the topic 29 in which they examined the evidence for the holobiont as a biological entity They considered the tight integration of physiological developmental reproductive and even immunological components between host and microbial symbionts to provide a foundation for this concept For example mammalian mothers milk contains sugars that appear to be for the benefit of the microbial symbionts because they cannot be metabolized by the newborn 34 They also cite the horizontal acquisition of DNA coding for syncytin 35 a protein that allows formation of the placenta as a key step in the evolution of placental mammals which also demonstrates adaptive evolution in the holobiont In this review 29 Roughgarden begins to sketch a population genetic model of holobiont evolution containing a host species and a single microbial symbiont and in which selection is based only on the number of copies of the symbiont genome acquired by the host The model contains three sequential processes per generation microbes can move between hosts they can proliferate within hosts and holobionts can survive or perish dependent on the number of symbionts acquired This model was enough to show that with vertical transmission a deleterious symbiont will reduce the number of holobionts and symbionts while a beneficial symbiont will tend to increase the sizes of both groups However horizontal transmission binds the collection of microbiomes into a unified system a meta community rather than a collection of independent communities Roughgarden followed this review with two papers 36 37 that further fleshed out her model of holobiont evolution The first 36 showed that when microbes colonize hosts following a Poisson distribution horizontal transmission can still lead to holobiont evolution when beneficial symbionts increase the success of their hosts and thus flood the microbial source pool the converse case with parasitic microbes also holds true She calls this phenomenon collective inheritance as opposed to lineal Mendelian inheritance The second paper 37 adds a second microbial species to the model as well as a colonization parameter d which partially determines the Poisson rate parameter The d parameter approximates the density of the symbiont strain around the host or the host s selectivity for the symbiont species depending on context Because microbial colonization of the host follows a Poisson distribution there is no Hardy Weinberg analog and directional selection tends to be more diffuse than expectated under vertical transmission She then reasons from this two microbe model that the host is likely to use antibodies and probodies to modulate d for each microbial species in effect orchestrating things so that only microbes that provide some minimum amount of altruism toward their host are allowed to remain in symbiosis with the host From the microbe s standpoint those species that provide the minimum amount of altruism to clear the host s threshold will tend to outcompete those that provide more This paper 37 carefully demonstrates that this host orchestrated species selection process is conceptually distinct from co evolution or multi level selection and can predict and explain the tight integration of hosts and their microbial symbionts found throughout the eukaryotic tree of life Awards and honors editStonewall Book Award 2005 Center Fellow National Center for Ecological Synthesis and Analysis University of California Santa Barbara 1998 Dinkelspiel Award for Undergraduate Teaching Stanford University 38 in 1995 Visiting Research Fellow at the Merton College University of Oxford in 1994 Elected Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1993 Fellow of Guggenheim Foundation in 1985 University Fellow Stanford University in 1978 Roughgarden has served as associate editor of several academic journals including Philosophy and Theory in Biology since 2008 American Naturalist 1984 1989 Oecologia 1979 1982 and Theoretical Population Biology 1975 1986 She was the vice chair and Chair of Theoretical Ecology Section of the Ecological Society of America during 2002 2003 She has served on the Nonprofit Organization Board for the Oceanic Society San Francisco the EPA Science Advisory Board Committee on Valuating the Protection of Ecological Systems and Services and the science advisory boards of the Pacific Ocean Conservation Network California and the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary Santa Barbara 39 Selected bibliography editRoughgarden Joan Spring 2007 Challenging Darwin s theory of sexual selection Daedalus 136 2 23 36 doi 10 1162 daed 2007 136 2 23 S2CID 57571279 Roughgarden J The Genial Gene Deconstructing Darwinian Selfishness Hardcover ed University of California Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 520 25826 6 Roughgarden J Evolution and Christian Faith Reflections of an Evolutionary Biologist Hardcover ed Washington D C Island Press 2006 ISBN 1 59726 098 3 Roughgarden J Evolution s Rainbow Diversity Gender and Sexuality in Nature and People Berkeley CA Univ of California Press 2004 ISBN 0 520 24073 1 Roughgarden J Primer of Ecological Theory 1st ed Prentice Hall 1997 Roughgarden J Anolis Lizards of the Caribbean Ecology Evolution and Plate Tectonics Hardcover ed Oxford Univ Press 1995 Roughgarden J May R M and Levin S A eds Perspectives in Ecological Theory Oxford Univ Press 1995 Ehrlich Paul R Roughgarden Jonathan 1987 Science of Ecology Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0023317002 Roughgarden J Theory of Population Genetics and Evolutionary Ecology an Introduction 1st ed Prentice Hall 1979 Simpson Layne A Gender and Society vol 19 no 3 2005 pp 425 426 JSTOR www jstor org stable 30044605 References edit Yoon Carol Kaesuk October 17 2000 Scientist at Work Joan Roughgarden A Theorist With Personal Experience Of the Divide Between the Sexes The New York Times Retrieved March 7 2014 Curriculum Vitae Joan Roughgarden Stanford University Retrieved March 7 2014 Pacala Stephen W Roughgarden Jonathan 1985 Population Experiments with the Anolis Lizards of St Maarten and St Eustatius Ecology 66 1 129 141 Bibcode 1985Ecol 66 129P doi 10 2307 1941313 ISSN 1939 9170 JSTOR 1941313 Post David M Palkovacs Eric P June 12 2009 Eco evolutionary feedbacks in community and ecosystem ecology interactions between the ecological theatre and the evolutionary play Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 364 1523 1629 1640 doi 10 1098 rstb 2009 0012 ISSN 0962 8436 PMC 2690506 PMID 19414476 Paine Robert T Vadas Robert L 1969 The Effects of Grazing by Sea Urchins Strongylocentrotus spp on Benthic Algal Populations Limnology and Oceanography 14 5 710 719 Bibcode 1969LimOc 14 710P doi 10 4319 lo 1969 14 5 0710 a b Connell Joseph H 1961 The Influence of Interspecific Competition and Other Factors on the Distribution of the Barnacle Chthamalus Stellatus Ecology 42 4 710 723 Bibcode 1961Ecol 42 710C doi 10 2307 1933500 ISSN 0012 9658 JSTOR 1933500 Connell Joseph H 1961 Effects of Competition Predation by Thais lapillus and Other Factors on Natural Populations of the Barnacle Balanus balanoides Ecological Monographs 31 1 61 104 Bibcode 1961EcoM 31 61C doi 10 2307 1950746 ISSN 0012 9615 JSTOR 1950746 a b Gaines S Roughgarden J June 1 1985 Larval settlement rate A leading determinant of structure in an ecological community of the marine intertidal zone Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 82 11 3707 3711 Bibcode 1985PNAS 82 3707G doi 10 1073 pnas 82 11 3707 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 397856 PMID 16593571 Connolly Sean R Roughgarden Jonathan April 1 1998 A Latitudinal Gradient in Northeast Pacific Intertidal Community Structure Evidence for an Oceanographically Based Synthesis of Marine Community Theory The American Naturalist 151 4 311 326 doi 10 1086 286121 ISSN 0003 0147 PMID 18811323 S2CID 23831003 Connolly Sean R Roughgarden Joan 1999 Theory of Marine Communities Competition Predation and Recruitment Dependent Interaction Strength Ecological Monographs 69 3 277 296 doi 10 1890 0012 9615 1999 069 0277 tomccp 2 0 co 2 ISSN 0012 9615 Caley M J Carr M H Hixon M A Hughes T P Jones G P Menge B A 1996 Recruitment and the Local Dynamics of Open Marine Populations Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 27 1 477 500 doi 10 1146 annurev ecolsys 27 1 477 ISSN 0066 4162 Archived from the original on January 31 2022 Retrieved January 31 2022 Roughgarden Joan 2013 Evolution s rainbow diversity gender and sexuality in nature and people Tenth anniversary ed Berkeley ISBN 978 0 520 95797 8 OCLC 861528157 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Moser Bob On the Originality of Species Stanford Magazine No May June 2004 Stanford University Retrieved June 13 2021 Jonah Lehrer The Effeminate Sheep Seed June July 2006 Reprinted in Richard Preston ed 2007 The Best American Science and Nature Writing New York Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 618 72231 0 a b Q amp A with Joan Roughgarden on the Problems with the Theory of Sexual Selection MIT Press February 11 2019 Archived from the original on June 13 2021 Retrieved June 13 2021 a b c Roughgarden Joan Oishi Meeko Akcay Erol February 17 2006 Reproductive Social Behavior Cooperative Games to Replace Sexual Selection Science 311 5763 965 969 Bibcode 2006Sci 311 965R doi 10 1126 science 1110105 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 16484485 S2CID 32364112 a b c d Atkinson Nick May 5 2006 Sexual selection alternative slammed The Scientist Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved May 15 2007 a b c Dall S R X McNamara J M Wedell N Hosken D J May 5 2006 Debating Sexual Selection and Mating Strategies PDF Science 312 5774 689b 697b doi 10 1126 science 312 5774 689b PMID 16675684 S2CID 10887773 Retrieved June 14 2021 a b Clutton Brock Tim December 21 2007 Sexual Selection in Males and Females Science 318 5858 1882 1885 Bibcode 2007Sci 318 1882C doi 10 1126 science 1133311 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 18096798 S2CID 6883765 Roughgarden Joan 2009 The genial gene deconstructing Darwinian selfishness Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25826 6 OCLC 264039560 Dawkins Richard The selfish gene OCLC 1238007082 Folse HJ 3rd Roughgarden J 2010 What is an individual organism A multilevel selection perspective The Quarterly Review of Biology 85 4 447 72 doi 10 1086 656905 PMID 21243964 S2CID 19816447 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Roughgarden J 2012 The social selection alternative to sexual selection Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 367 1600 2294 2303 doi 10 1098 rstb 2011 0282 PMC 3391423 PMID 22777017 Allen Arthur May 1 2014 Sexual Selection s Mystique Lingers BioScience 64 5 375 380 doi 10 1093 biosci biu047 ISSN 0006 3568 a b Roughgarden Joan Adkins Regan Elizabeth Akcay Erol Crawford Jeremy Chase Gadagkar Raghavendra Griffith Simon C Hinde Camilla A Hoquet Thierry O Connor Cailin Prokop Zofia M Prum Richard O January 10 2015 Sexual selection studies a NESCent catalyst meeting doi 10 7287 peerj preprints 680v3 S2CID 14039177 First Congregational Church of Berkeley Event Details Archived from the original on October 8 2007 Retrieved September 19 2006 Roughgarden Joan Evolution and Christian Faith Reflections of an Evolutionary Biologist Washington D C Island Press 2006 TSN Beyond Belief Science Reason Religion amp Survival thesciencenetwork org Retrieved September 27 2016 a b c Roughgarden Joan Gilbert Scott F Rosenberg Eugene Zilber Rosenberg Ilana Lloyd Elisabeth A 2018 Holobionts as Units of Selection and a Model of Their Population Dynamics and Evolution Biological Theory 13 1 44 65 doi 10 1007 s13752 017 0287 1 ISSN 1555 5542 S2CID 256282704 Bordenstein Seth R Theis Kevin R August 18 2015 Host Biology in Light of the Microbiome Ten Principles of Holobionts and Hologenomes PLOS Biology 13 8 e1002226 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1002226 ISSN 1545 7885 PMC 4540581 PMID 26284777 Rosenberg Eugene Zilber Rosenberg Ilana May 4 2016 Collier R John ed Microbes Drive Evolution of Animals and Plants the Hologenome Concept mBio 7 2 e01395 doi 10 1128 mBio 01395 15 ISSN 2161 2129 PMC 4817260 PMID 27034283 Gilbert Scott F Sapp Jan Tauber Alfred I 2012 A Symbiotic View of Life We Have Never Been Individuals The Quarterly Review of Biology 87 4 325 341 doi 10 1086 668166 ISSN 0033 5770 PMID 23397797 S2CID 14279096 Moran Nancy A Sloan Daniel B December 4 2015 The Hologenome Concept Helpful or Hollow PLOS Biology 13 12 e1002311 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1002311 ISSN 1545 7885 PMC 4670207 PMID 26636661 Yoshida Erina Sakurama Haruko Kiyohara Masashi Nakajima Masahiro Kitaoka Motomitsu Ashida Hisashi Hirose Junko Katayama Takane Yamamoto Kenji Kumagai Hidehiko September 16 2011 Bifidobacterium longum subsp infantis uses two different b galactosidases for selectively degrading type 1 and type 2 human milk oligosaccharides Glycobiology 22 3 361 368 doi 10 1093 glycob cwr116 ISSN 1460 2423 PMID 21926104 Dupressoir A Lavialle C Heidmann T 2012 From ancestral infectious retroviruses to bona fide cellular genes Role of the captured syncytins in placentation Placenta 33 9 663 671 doi 10 1016 j placenta 2012 05 005 ISSN 0143 4004 PMID 22695103 a b Roughgarden Joan March 2 2020 Holobiont Evolution Mathematical Model with Vertical vs Horizontal Microbiome Transmission Philosophy Theory and Practice in Biology 12 20220112 doi 10 3998 ptpbio 16039257 0012 002 hdl 2027 spo 16039257 0012 002 ISSN 2475 3025 S2CID 216329421 a b c Roughgarden Joan June 1 2023 Holobiont Evolution Population Theory for the Hologenome The American Naturalist 201 6 763 778 doi 10 1086 723782 ISSN 0003 0147 PMID 37229712 S2CID 220253227 Lloyd W Dinkelspiel Awards Registrar s Office registrar stanford edu Retrieved April 4 2019 Science Matters California Science Center Archived from the original on July 13 2010 External links editJoan Roughgarden profile Stanford Univ Joan Roughgarden 50 min interv Web Radio Gender Talk Seed Magazine article on sexual selection theory Video with mp3 available of conversation with Roughgarden and Robert Wright on Bloggingheads tv Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joan Roughgarden amp oldid 1217692165, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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