A series of explorations in fields where ecology, genetics, and evolutionary studies meet around the common theme of the consequences of environmental heterogeneity. Chapter On Theories and Models Strategies of Adaptation The Theory of the Niche The Species in Space The Genetic System From Micro- to Macro-Evolution
One of the most important works ever written in ecology and evolution. After reading this masterpiece, one realizes that most of contemporaneous advances in evolutionary ecology are simple variations on a major theme played by Richard Levins in the sixties.
Dense but brilliant. Based on a series of lectures delivered in Cuba (!) in the '60s, this monograph is essential reading for researchers interested in this topic.
This monograph consists of a series of lectures given by Levins in 1965 to the Institute of Biology of the Cuban Academy of Science and the Department of Biology at Yale University. Here Levins does an excellent job of bringing together the, then current, understanding of how ecology and geno/phenotypes interface with evolution. Levins goes into some detail with the mathematics which he supports with simple plots of models of fitness sets. Despite being dated, I found this work to be helpful in considering how the different ecological and genetic parameters of species are interacting. If you are not up on your mathematical models, ecology or evolution, this might be a tough read but well worth the effort.