Repository logo
 
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

A typing error in Tokeshi's test of bimodality

Use this identifier to reference this record.
Name:Description:Size:Format: 
5_Barreto et al GEB_Tokeshi.pdf124.43 KBAdobe PDF Download

Advisor(s)

Abstract(s)

“One way to describe patterns of species distribution is to plot the frequency histograms using species–range-size data (Gaston, 1994; Brown, 1995; Gaston & Blackburn, 2000). Usually the untransformed geographical ranges of species are distributed following a ‘hollow curve’, i.e. most species have narrow ranges and very few have widespread distributions. This highly ‘right-skewed’ curve has been regarded as unimodal (e.g. Gaston, 1994). In some cases, however, the species-range-size distribution shows a bimodal pattern (Hanski, 1982; Brown, 1984, 1995; Gaston, 1994; Gaston & Blackburn, 2000), in which to the left-hand mode is added a right hand mode generated by the widespread group of species that occur in almost all sampled sites. The ‘core-satellite species hypothesis’ (Hanski, 1982) and the ‘resource usage model’ (Brown, 1984, 1995) were proposed to explain the finding that a few species are regionally common (widespread) and locally abundant (the ‘core’ species in Hanski’s model; the generalists or broad-niched species in Brown’s model), while most species can be regarded as having smaller ranges and low local abundances (the ‘satellite’ species in Hanski’s model; the specialists or narrow-niched species in Brown’s model). […]”

Description

Copyright © 2003 Blackwell Publishing

Keywords

Ecology

Citation

Barreto, S.; Borges, P.A.V.; Guo, Q.. A typing error in Tokeshi's test of bimodality. "Global Ecology and Biogeography", 12(2), 173-174, 2003.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue