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Integrative and Comparative Biology 2002 42(5):911-912; doi:10.1093/icb/42.5.911
© 2002 by The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
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Integrative Approaches to Biogeography: Patterns and Processes on Land and in the Sea1

Rachel Collin2,1 and Marta de Maintenon2
1 Committee on Evolutionary Biology, University of Chicago, Culver Hall, Rm. 402, 1025 E. 57th St., Chicago, Illinois 60637, and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, unit 0948, APO AA 34002 (current address)
2 Department of Marine Science, University of Hawaii at Hilo, Hilo, Hawaii HI 96720

At the 2002 SICB meeting in Anaheim, we brought together some of the leaders in terrestrial and marine phylogeography for a day-long symposium. This symposium combined presentations from ten scientists whose question-driven research focuses on testing hypotheses about patterns and processes in biogeography in both vertebrate and invertebrate animals and including marine, terrestrial, and freshwater systems. The papers gathered here cover the breadth of the presentations. By explicitly seeking to combine marine and terrestrial workers into a single symposium we hoped that the different patterns and processes that predominate in major biomes and the different assumptions made by the workers in those areas would be highlighted.


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