Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities

The rank abundance of common and rare species within ecological communities is remarkably consistent from the tropics to the tundra. This invariant patterning provides one of ecology’s most enduring and unified tenets: most species rare and a few very common. Increasingly, attention is focused upon...

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Main Authors: Robert J. Warren Ii, David K. Skelly, Oswald J. Schmitz, Mark A. Bradford
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.293.7942
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spelling ftciteseerx:oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.293.7942 2023-05-15T18:40:21+02:00 Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities Robert J. Warren Ii David K. Skelly Oswald J. Schmitz Mark A. Bradford The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives 2010 application/zip http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.293.7942 en eng http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.293.7942 Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it. ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pub/pmc/59/98/PLoS_One_2011_Mar_9_6(3)_e17342.tar.gz text 2010 ftciteseerx 2016-01-07T21:41:47Z The rank abundance of common and rare species within ecological communities is remarkably consistent from the tropics to the tundra. This invariant patterning provides one of ecology’s most enduring and unified tenets: most species rare and a few very common. Increasingly, attention is focused upon elucidating biological mechanisms that explain these species abundance distributions (SADs), but these evaluations remain controversial. We show that college basketball wins generate SADs just like those observed in ecological communities. Whereas college basketball wins are structured by competitive interactions, the result produces a SAD pattern indistinguishable from random wins. We also show that species abundance data for tropical trees exhibits a significant-digit pattern consistent with data derived from complex structuring forces. These results cast doubt upon the ability of SAD analysis to resolve ecological mechanism, and their patterning may reflect statistical artifact as much as biological processes. Text Tundra Unknown
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description The rank abundance of common and rare species within ecological communities is remarkably consistent from the tropics to the tundra. This invariant patterning provides one of ecology’s most enduring and unified tenets: most species rare and a few very common. Increasingly, attention is focused upon elucidating biological mechanisms that explain these species abundance distributions (SADs), but these evaluations remain controversial. We show that college basketball wins generate SADs just like those observed in ecological communities. Whereas college basketball wins are structured by competitive interactions, the result produces a SAD pattern indistinguishable from random wins. We also show that species abundance data for tropical trees exhibits a significant-digit pattern consistent with data derived from complex structuring forces. These results cast doubt upon the ability of SAD analysis to resolve ecological mechanism, and their patterning may reflect statistical artifact as much as biological processes.
author2 The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
format Text
author Robert J. Warren Ii
David K. Skelly
Oswald J. Schmitz
Mark A. Bradford
spellingShingle Robert J. Warren Ii
David K. Skelly
Oswald J. Schmitz
Mark A. Bradford
Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities
author_facet Robert J. Warren Ii
David K. Skelly
Oswald J. Schmitz
Mark A. Bradford
author_sort Robert J. Warren Ii
title Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities
title_short Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities
title_full Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities
title_fullStr Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities
title_full_unstemmed Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities
title_sort universal ecological patterns in college basketball communities
publishDate 2010
url http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.293.7942
genre Tundra
genre_facet Tundra
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