RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
2,066 results for "limits to growth" — page 82 of 104
R_4_07 — Venom Evolution and Biochemical Arms Races
Venom — a cocktail of bioactive molecules injected via a specialized delivery apparatus (fangs, stingers, harpoons, nematocysts, spurs) to subdue prey, deter predators, or aid in competition — has evolved independently o
R_4_15 — Insect Evolution: Flight, Metamorphosis, and Mega-Diversity
Insects (class Insecta) are the most species-rich group of organisms on Earth — with over 1 million described species and an estimated 5–10 million total, they account for approximately 80% of all known animal species. T
R_4_09 — Parasitism and Host-Parasite Coevolution
Parasitism — a symbiotic relationship in which one organism (the parasite) benefits at the expense of another (the host) — is arguably the most common lifestyle on Earth. By some estimates, over 40% of all described spec
R_4_13 — Evolution of Sleep: Why Organisms Rest
Sleep — a reversible state of reduced awareness, diminished responsiveness, and characteristic neural activity — is found across virtually all animals with a nervous system, from C. elegans (which exhibits a quiescent st
R_4_08 — Echolocation and the Evolution of Sensory Systems
The evolution of sensory systems represents some of the most striking convergent solutions to ecological challenges across the animal kingdom. Echolocation — the ability to emit sound pulses and interpret returning echoe
R_3_01 — Epigenetics and Ancestral Memory
Epigenetics — heritable changes in gene expression WITHOUT changes to the DNA sequence — has revolutionized biology over the past two decades. Your genes are the hardware; epigenetics is the software that determines whic
R_3_05 — Coevolution — Arms Races, Mutualisms, and Red Queens
Coevolution — reciprocal evolutionary change between interacting species — is one of the most powerful engines of biological diversity. Leigh Van Valen's Red Queen hypothesis (1973) captured its essence: species must con
R_3_14 — Evolution of Aging and Senescence
Aging — the progressive decline in physiological function and increase in mortality rate with time — is one of evolution's deepest puzzles: why would natural selection, which optimizes fitness, permit organisms to deteri
R_3_02 — Horizontal Gene Transfer in Complex Life
For decades, the "tree of life" was the central metaphor of evolutionary biology — species branching neatly from common ancestors through vertical gene transmission (parent to offspring). This metaphor is now BROKEN, at
R_3_06 — Altruism and Cooperation in Nature
Altruism — behavior that reduces the actor's fitness while increasing the recipient's — presents a fundamental puzzle for evolutionary theory: how can natural selection favor genes that reduce their bearer's reproduction
R_3_19 — Bacterial Chemotaxis and Signal Transduction
Bacterial chemotaxis — the ability of bacteria to sense chemical gradients in their environment and direct their movement accordingly — is one of the most thoroughly understood signal transduction systems in all of biolo
R_3_09 — Molecular Phylogenetics and Tree of Life
Molecular phylogenetics — reconstructing evolutionary relationships from DNA, RNA, and protein sequences — has revolutionized our understanding of the tree of life since Carl Woese's landmark 1977 discovery, using small-
R_3_15 — Epigenetics and Lamarckian Inheritance: Transgenerational Mechanisms Beyond DNA Sequence
Epigenetics — the study of heritable changes in gene expression that occur without alteration to the underlying DNA sequence — has fundamentally reshaped modern biology since the term was coined by Conrad Hal Waddington
R_3_03 — Evo-Devo: Evolutionary Developmental Biology
Evolutionary developmental biology ("evo-devo") reveals one of biology's most profound discoveries: the same small set of "toolkit" genes (Hox, Pax6, Sonic hedgehog, BMP, Wnt, etc.) controls body plan development across
R_3_13 — Evolution of the Immune System
The immune system is one of evolution's most elaborate and costly creations — vertebrate adaptive immunity alone employs V(D)J recombination to generate over 10¹¹ distinct antibody specificities from fewer than 400 gene
R_5_09 — Color in Nature: Structural Color, Pigmentation, and Signaling
Color in nature serves functions spanning camouflage, warning, mate attraction, thermoregulation, and protection from UV radiation — produced through two fundamentally different mechanisms: pigmentary color (selective ab
R_5_13 — Biological Invasions: Introduced Species and Ecosystem Disruption
Biological invasions — the introduction and spread of species beyond their native range, typically aided by human activity — represent one of the top five drivers of global biodiversity loss, alongside habitat destructio
R_5_02 — Megafauna Extinction: Quaternary Losses and the Overkill Debate
Between ~50,000 and 10,000 years ago, Earth lost the majority of its large-bodied animals (megafauna >44 kg) — woolly mammoths, ground sloths, saber-toothed cats, giant wombats, moa, and dozens of other spectacular speci
R_5_03 — Domestication of Plants and Agriculture
The domestication of plants — one of the most transformative events in human history — began independently in at least 10 geographic centers between ~12,000 and 5,000 years ago. The Fertile Crescent (wheat, barley, lenti
R_5_05 — Bioluminescence: Evolution and Deep-Sea Adaptation
Bioluminescence — the production of light by living organisms through chemical reactions — is one of the most extraordinary and frequently convergent traits in evolution, having evolved independently at least 94 times ac
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