Rapoport's Rule
978-613-4-40417-4
6134404179
68
2011-02-24
29.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Rapoport's rule is an ecological hypothesis that states that latitudinal ranges of plants and animals are generally smaller at lower than at high latitudes. Stevens (1989) named the rule after Eduardo H. Rapoport, who had earlier provided evidence for the phenomenon for subspecies of mammals (Rapoport 1975, 1982). Stevens used the rule to “explain” greater species diversity in the tropics in the sense that latitudinal gradients in species diversity and the rule have identical exceptional data and so must have the same underlying cause. Narrower ranges in the tropics would facilitate more species to coexist.
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