G W Gilchrist
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Explore the profile of G W Gilchrist including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
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Articles
9
Citations
363
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Recent Articles
1.
Balanya J, Huey R, Gilchrist G, Serra L
Heredity (Edinb)
. 2009 Jul;
103(5):364-7.
PMID: 19639003
The Palaearctic species Drosophila subobscura recently invaded the west coast of Chile and North America. This invasion helped to corroborate the adaptive value of the rich chromosomal polymorphism of the...
2.
Pascual M, Chapuis M, Mestres F, Balanya J, Huey R, Gilchrist G, et al.
Mol Ecol
. 2007 Jul;
16(15):3069-83.
PMID: 17651188
Drosophila subobscura is a Palearctic species that was first observed in South and North America in the early 1980s, and that rapidly invaded broad latitudinal ranges on both continents. To...
3.
Gilchrist G, Huey R, Serra L
Genetica
. 2002 Feb;
112-113:273-86.
PMID: 11838770
Parallel latitudinal clines across species and continents provide dramatic evidence of the efficacy of natural selection, however little is known about the dynamics involved in cline formation. For example, several...
4.
Gilchrist G, Huey R
Evolution
. 2001 Mar;
55(1):209-14.
PMID: 11263742
Cross-generational effects refer to nongenetic influences of the parental phenotype or environment on offspring phenotypes. Such effects are commonly observed, but their adaptive significance is largely unresolved. We examined cross-generational...
5.
Gibert P, Huey R, Gilchrist G
Evolution
. 2001 Mar;
55(1):205-9.
PMID: 11263741
We explored the extent to which a phenotypic trait (walking speed) of Drosophila melanogaster is influenced by population, developmental temperature, adult temperature, and age. Our goals were to estimate the...
6.
Huey R, Gilchrist G, Carlson M, Berrigan D, Serra L
Science
. 2000 Jan;
287(5451):308-9.
PMID: 10634786
The introduction and rapid spread of Drosophila subobscura in the New World two decades ago provide an opportunity to determine the predictability and rate of evolution of a geographic cline....
7.
Gilchrist G, Huey R
Heredity (Edinb)
. 1999 Aug;
83 ( Pt 1):15-29.
PMID: 10447699
We selected on knockdown temperature, the upper temperature at which insects lose the ability to cling to an inclined surface, in replicate populations of Drosophila melanogaster for 32 generations (46...
8.
Gilchrist G, Huey R, Partridge L
Physiol Zool
. 1997 Jul;
70(4):403-14.
PMID: 9237300
We compared aspects of the thermal sensitivity of replicated lines of Drosophila melanogaster that had been evolving by laboratory natural selection at three selection temperatures: 16.5 degrees C (10+ yr),...
9.
Huey R, Wakefield T, Crill W, Gilchrist G
Heredity (Edinb)
. 1995 Feb;
74 ( Pt 2):216-23.
PMID: 7706111
We used a repeated-measures, four-factor experimental design to determine how the fecundity of Drosophila melanogaster during the first 5 days of adult life was influenced by paternal, maternal, developmental and...