Literature DB >> 28973811

The Nonconcept of Species Diversity: A Critique and Alternative Parameters.

Stuart H Hurlbert.   

Abstract

The recent literature on species diversity contains many semantic, conceptual, and technical problems. It is suggested that, as a result of these problems, species diversity has become a meaningless concept, that the term be abandoned, and that ecologists take a more critical approach to species-number relations and rely less on information theoretic and other analogies. As multispecific collections of organisms possess numerous statistical properties which conform to the conventional criteria for diversity indices, such collections are not intrinsically arrangeable in linear order along some diversity scale. Several such properties or "species composition parameters" having straightforward biological interpretations are presented as alternatives to the diversity approach. The two most basic of these are simply ▵1 =[n/n-1][1-Σi (N _i/_N)2 ] =the proportion of potential interindividual encounters which is interspecific (as opposed to intraspecific), assuming every individual in the collection can encounter all other individuals, E(Sn ) = Σi [1-(N-Nin )/(Nn )] =the expected number of species in a sample of n individuals selected at random from a collection containing N individuals, S species, and Ni individuals in the ith species. © 1971 by the Ecological Society of America.

Entities:  

Year:  1971        PMID: 28973811     DOI: 10.2307/1934145

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  233 in total

1.  Comparative studies on the usefulness of seven ecological indices for the marine coastal monitoring close to the shore on the Swedish East coast.

Authors:  R A Danilov; N G Ekelund
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2001-02       Impact factor: 2.513

2.  Increase in bacterial community diversity in subsurface aquifers receiving livestock wastewater input.

Authors:  J C Cho; S J Kim
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 4.792

3.  Assessment of microbial diversity in four southwestern United States soils by 16S rRNA gene terminal restriction fragment analysis.

Authors:  J Dunbar; L O Ticknor; C R Kuske
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2000-07       Impact factor: 4.792

4.  Numerical dominance and phylotype diversity of marine Rhodobacter species during early colonization of submerged surfaces in coastal marine waters as determined by 16S ribosomal DNA sequence analysis and fluorescence in situ hybridization.

Authors:  Hongyue Dang; Charles R Lovell
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 4.792

5.  Molecular and culture-based analyses of prokaryotic communities from an agricultural soil and the burrows and casts of the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus.

Authors:  Michelle A Furlong; David R Singleton; David C Coleman; William B Whitman
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2002-03       Impact factor: 4.792

6.  Axial differences in community structure of Crenarchaeota and Euryarchaeota in the highly compartmentalized gut of the soil-feeding termite Cubitermes orthognathus.

Authors:  M W Friedrich; D Schmitt-Wagner; T Lueders; A Brune
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 4.792

7.  Empirical and theoretical bacterial diversity in four Arizona soils.

Authors:  John Dunbar; Susan M Barns; Lawrence O Ticknor; Cheryl R Kuske
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 4.792

8.  Predicted correspondence between species abundances and dendrograms of niche similarities.

Authors:  George Sugihara; Louis-Félix Bersier; T Richard E Southwood; Stuart L Pimm; Robert M May
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2003-04-17       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Fidelity of select restriction endonucleases in determining microbial diversity by terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism.

Authors:  Jeff J Engebretson; Craig L Moyer
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 4.792

10.  Bifidobacteria in feces and environmental waters.

Authors:  Regina Lamendella; Jorge W Santo Domingo; Catherine Kelty; Daniel B Oerther
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2007-11-09       Impact factor: 4.792

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