Author:
Anderson DJ,Jacobs SWL,Malik AR
Abstract
The analysis of density data from a variety of Australian dry-land vegetation
types provides evidence of widespread randomness when the component distributions
are compared with a Poissonian model. While such randomness may be reflecting
traditionally held beliefs concerning structure in colonizing and "relict" populations,
randomness may develop as a result of a differential elimination of individuals between
high and low density phases in an originally patterned population. It is suggested that
structure in vegetation cannot be estimated reliably by simple observation alone, and
this statement is evidenced by the ubiquity of random (and to a lesser extent contagious)
distributions which are found in Australian dry-land communities, in contradistinction
to the widely held view that such distributions are necessarily essentially regular in
their character.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
23 articles.
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