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      From Darwin's Origin of Species toward a theory of natural history

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      F1000Prime Reports
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          Abstract

          Darwin is the father of evolutionary theory because he identified evolutionary patterns and, with Natural Selection, he ascertained the exquisitely ecological ultimate processes that lead to evolution. The proximate processes of evolution he proposed, however, predated the discovery of genetics, the backbone of modern evolutionary theory. The later discovery of the laws of inheritance by Mendel and the rediscovery of Mendel in the early 20th century led to two reforms of Darwinism: Neo-Darwinism and the Modern Synthesis (and subsequent refinements). If Darwin's evolutionary thought required much refinement, his ecological insight is still very modern. In the first edition of The Origin of Species, Darwin did not use either the word “evolution” or the word “ecology”. “Ecology” was not coined until after the publication of the Origin. Evolution, for him, was the origin of varieties, then species, which he referred to as well-marked varieties, whereas, instead of using ecology, he used “the economy of nature”. The Origin contains a high proportion of currently accepted ecological principles. Darwin labelled himself a naturalist. His discipline (natural history) was a blend of ecology and evolution in which he investigated both the patterns and the processes that determine the organization of life. Reductionist approaches, however, often keep the two disciplines separated from each other, undermining a full understanding of natural phenomena that might be favored by blending ecology and evolution through the development of a modern Theory of Natural History based on Darwin's vision of the study of life.

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          Most cited references42

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          A new evolutionary law

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            The struggle for existence, by G. F. Gause.

            G. Gauze (1934)
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              How many species are there on Earth?

              R M May (1988)
              This article surveys current answers to the factual question posed in the title and reviews the kinds of information that are needed to make these answers more precise. Various factors affecting diversity are also reviewed. These include the structure of food webs, the relative abundance of species, the number of species and of individuals in different categories of body size, along with other determinants of the commonness and rarity of organisms.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                F1000Prime Rep
                F1000Prime Rep
                F1000Prime Reports
                Faculty of 1000 Ltd
                2051-7599
                12 May 2015
                2015
                : 7
                : 49
                Affiliations
                [1]DiSTeBA, University of Salento, 73100 Lecce (LE), Italy
                [2]CNR-ISMAR, via De Marini 6, 16149 Genova (GE), Italy
                Article
                49
                10.12703/P7-49
                4447030
                f5583ce9-9d3b-4f00-b5b7-95035f294f37
                © 2015 Faculty of 1000 Ltd

                All F1000Prime Reports articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial License, which permits non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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