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'''Simberloff, Daniel y Lawrence G. Abele. 1982.''' Refuge design an island biogeographic theory: effects of fragmentation. Am. Nat. 120(1):41-50 | '''Simberloff, Daniel y Lawrence G. Abele. 1982.''' Refuge design an island biogeographic theory: effects of fragmentation. Am. Nat. 120(1):41-50 | ||
"Cole's theoretical conclusion that one large site generally contains more species than several small ones [(SLOSS question)] is falsified by data in the literature, as is his contention that exceptions will only occur when the species in the sites are but a small fraction of those in the species pool. | "Cole's theoretical conclusion that one large site generally contains more species than several small ones [(SLOSS question)] is falsified by data in the literature, as is his contention that exceptions will only occur when the species in the sites are but a small fraction of those in the species pool. For a variety of taxa, for a number of different habitat types, and for a wide range of sizes of the biota as a fraction of the pool, either there is no clear best strategy, or several small sites are better than one large site. Since there are numerous idiosyncratic biological considerations, plus a number of nonbiological ones that bear heavily on refuge design, it is unlikely that a general reductionist model can generate useful predictions or advice on this matter." Tomado verbatim del resumen del artículo. | ||
Véase [[Diamond, Jared M. 1975.|Diamond, 1975]] para resumen de los puntos contradichos por Simberloff y Abele. | Véase [[Diamond, Jared M. 1975.|Diamond, 1975]] para resumen de los puntos contradichos por Simberloff y Abele. |
Revisión actual - 19:12 4 jun 2018
Simberloff, Daniel y Lawrence G. Abele. 1982. Refuge design an island biogeographic theory: effects of fragmentation. Am. Nat. 120(1):41-50
"Cole's theoretical conclusion that one large site generally contains more species than several small ones [(SLOSS question)] is falsified by data in the literature, as is his contention that exceptions will only occur when the species in the sites are but a small fraction of those in the species pool. For a variety of taxa, for a number of different habitat types, and for a wide range of sizes of the biota as a fraction of the pool, either there is no clear best strategy, or several small sites are better than one large site. Since there are numerous idiosyncratic biological considerations, plus a number of nonbiological ones that bear heavily on refuge design, it is unlikely that a general reductionist model can generate useful predictions or advice on this matter." Tomado verbatim del resumen del artículo.
Véase Diamond, 1975 para resumen de los puntos contradichos por Simberloff y Abele.