- Peter and Rosemary Grant
Peter R. Grant and B. Rosemary Grant, a married couple, are both British evolutionary biologists at
Princeton University . They are noted for their work onDarwin's Finches on theGalapagos Island namedDaphne Major . The Grants have spent six months of the year each year since 1973 capturing, tagging, taking blood samples, and releasing finches from the islands.Whilst the Grants' detailed studies have demonstrated the effects of natural selection beyond a reasonable doubt, it has also shown that the alleged 13 "species" of Galapagos finches are, in practice, able to interbreed and are therefore correctly identified as "varieties" of a single species. This discovery might be regarded as particularly ironic since it finally vindicates Charles Darwin's own reading of the situation:
"... when I see [the Galapagos islands] in sight of each other and possessed of but a scanty stock of animals, tenanted by these birds but slightly differing in structure and filling the same place in Nature, I must suspect they are only varieties."
(quoted in "Charles Darwin: Evolution by Natural Selection", Sir Gavin De Beer. Nelson, Edinburgh:1963. p. 82.The Grants were the subject of the book "" by
Jonathan Weiner (Alfred A. Knopf, 1994), ISBN 0-679-40003-6, which won thePulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction in 1995. [http://www.pulitzer.org/year/1995/general-non-fiction/]In 2003 the Grants were joint recipients of the
Loye and Alden Miller Research Award . They won the 2005Balzan Prize for Population Biology [http://www.balzan.org//premiati.aspx?lang=en&Codice=1117&show=1&from=1117&from1=0] . The Balzan Prize citation states::"Peter and Rosemary Grant are distinguished for their remarkable long-term studies demonstrating evolution in action in Galápagos finches. They have demonstrated how very rapid changes in body and beak size in response to changes in the food supply are driven by natural selection. They have also elucidated the mechanisms by which new species arise and how genetic diversity is maintained in natural populations. The work of the Grants has had a seminal influence in the fields of population biology, evolution and ecology."Rosemary Grant was made a
Fellow of the Royal Society in 2007. In 2008 both Peter and Rosemary Grant were among the thirteen recipients of the Darwin-Wallace Award, which is bestowed every 50 years by theLinnean Society of London .ee also
* For other Peter Grants, see
Peter Grant References
* [http://www.pulitzer.org/year/1995/general-non-fiction/ Pulitzer Prize: 1995 General Non-Fiction]
* [http://www.uctv.ucsb.edu/more/voices/m3400Cgrant.html UCTV: Evolution in Action: Darwin's Finches of the Galápagos Islands - Peter R. Grant & Rosemary Grant]
* [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/01/6/l_016_01.html PBS: Evolution Library - Finch Beak Data Sheet]External links
* [http://www.eeb.princeton.edu/FACULTY/Grant_P/grantPeter.html Peter Grant's webpage]
* [http://www.eeb.princeton.edu/FACULTY/Grant_R/Grant_BR.html Rosemary Grant's webpage]
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