The Dynamics of Evolutionary Stasis
Niles Eldredge, John N. Thompson, Paul M. Brakefield, Sergey Gavrilets, David
Jablonski, Jeremy B. C. Jackson, Richard E. Lenski, Bruce S. Lieberman, Mark
A. McPeek, and William Miller III
Abstract
The fossil record displays remarkable stasis in many species over long
time periods, yet studies of extant populations often reveal rapid phenotypic
evolution and genetic differentiation among populations. Recent advances
in our understanding of the fossil record and in population genetics and
evolutionary ecology point to the complex geographic structure of species
being fundamental to resolution of how taxa can commonly exhibit both short-term
evolutionary dynamics and long-term stasis.