Acknowledgements | p. xi |
Preface | p. xiii |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Topics | p. 7 |
The biological approach to biogeography | p. 8 |
The evolutionary approach to biogeography | p. 10 |
The inductive approach to biogeography | p. 12 |
Biased approaches to biogeography | p. 14 |
Scales of variation | p. 16 |
Conclusions | p. 20 |
Patterns of concordance | p. 23 |
Qualitative and quantitative approaches | p. 25 |
The qualitative approach | p. 25 |
An example of the qualitative approach | p. 26 |
The quantitative approach | p. 27 |
An example of the quantitative approach | p. 28 |
Conclusions | p. 31 |
Methodology of quantitative biogeographical classification | p. 32 |
A model of biogeographical classification | p. 32 |
Criteria of biogeographical classification | p. 32 |
Problems in the application of classification criteria | p. 35 |
Endemism as a classification criterion | p. 35 |
Effects of defining sampling areas | p. 36 |
Procedures in biogeographical classification | p. 39 |
Similarity coefficients | p. 39 |
Effects of the number of shared taxa and of sampling area | p. 41 |
Testing differences between similarity coefficients | p. 43 |
Recommendations | p. 44 |
Hierarchical cluster techniques | p. 44 |
A generalized algorithm for agglomerative strategies | p. 45 |
Some specific agglomerative cluster techniques | p. 46 |
Recommendations | p. 48 |
Twinspan, a divisive technique | p. 48 |
Problems in the application of clustering algorithms | p. 48 |
Area delimitation | p. 48 |
Interlocation variation | p. 49 |
Intralocation variation | p. 50 |
Testing classifications | p. 51 |
Conclusions | p. 52 |
Criticism of biogeographical classification | p. 54 |
Biogeographical classification and taxonomic level | p. 54 |
Are biogeographical units homogeneous and stable? | p. 55 |
Geographical discordance of ranges | p. 56 |
How sharp are boundaries? | p. 57 |
Why are biogeographical classifications hierarchical? | p. 59 |
Conclusions | p. 60 |
Classification and ordination | p. 64 |
Efficiency of the models | p. 65 |
Methodology of ordination | p. 67 |
Scales of variation and concordant variation | p. 69 |
Combinations of classification and ordination | p. 70 |
Stability of ordinations | p. 71 |
An application of classification and ordination | p. 72 |
Conclusions | p. 76 |
Summary of Part I | p. 78 |
Geographical trends in species richness and biological traits | p. 81 |
Geographical trends in species richness | p. 83 |
Latitudinal trends | p. 83 |
Longitudinal trends | p. 85 |
Continental trends in avian diversity | p. 87 |
Continental trends in Holarctic plants | p. 90 |
Explanations of broad-scale trends in species richness | p. 92 |
Geographic nesting of species | p. 94 |
The impact of ecological factors on European Silenoidae | p. 98 |
The impact of historical factors on North American Polemoniaceae | p. 100 |
The impact of genetical factors on temperate wheats | p. 101 |
Conclusions | p. 102 |
Geographical trends in biological traits | p. 103 |
Leaf form in plants | p. 104 |
Life form in plants | p. 105 |
Polyploidy and genome size in plants | p. 106 |
Photosynthetic pathways | p. 109 |
Shell morphology in marine molluscs | p. 112 |
Alkaloid-bearing species | p. 114 |
Conclusions | p. 115 |
Intraspecific trends | p. 116 |
Morphological traits | p. 117 |
Physiological traits | p. 119 |
Population genetic variation | p. 120 |
Changes in population genetic structure | p. 121 |
Discordant variation in man | p. 122 |
Conclusions | p. 124 |
Summary of Part II | p. 125 |
Areography: the analysis of species ranges | p. 127 |
The anatomy of species ranges | p. 129 |
Range structure | p. 130 |
The range as an optimum-response surface | p. 130 |
The distribution of vitality and dynamic behaviour | p. 135 |
Latitudinal and altitudinal intensity distributions | p. 140 |
Evaluations of the optimum-response model | p. 142 |
Range shape | p. 142 |
Range size | p. 143 |
Range margins | p. 148 |
Indirect approaches to range delimitation | p. 148 |
Direct approaches to range delimitation | p. 154 |
Risk assessment | p. 157 |
Why study range margins? | p. 159 |
The geography of species interactions | p. 160 |
Potential ranges through monophagy | p. 161 |
Changes in the general level of intensity | p. 162 |
Invading species | p. 165 |
Optimum-response surfaces and climatic reconstruction | p. 166 |
Conclusions | p. 168 |
The dynamic structure of species ranges | p. 169 |
Good's Theories of Tolerance and Migration extended | p. 169 |
Climatic release and dispersal in the spruce budworm | p. 171 |
Climatic causes of range dynamics | p. 174 |
Features of range dynamics | p. 176 |
Seasonality and optimum-response surfaces | p. 177 |
Extinction | p. 180 |
Optimum surfaces and individualistic spatial behaviour | p. 182 |
Conclusion: the range as a process | p. 184 |
Population dynamic theories | p. 185 |
Population control versus risk spreading | p. 185 |
The balance of nature | p. 186 |
Extinction probabilities explained by energy budgets and spatial dynamics | p. 190 |
Conclusions | p. 193 |
Summary of Part III | p. 194 |
Species ranges and patterns of concordance | p. 197 |
Discontinuous variation in space and time | p. 199 |
Biogeographical provinces and their dynamics | p. 200 |
Glacials and interglacials | p. 205 |
The analysis of scales of variation | p. 208 |
The integration of scales of variation | p. 210 |
Global unity of climatic variation | p. 211 |
The representativity of our time | p. 213 |
Conclusions | p. 214 |
The future | p. 216 |
References | p. 219 |
Author index | p. 239 |
Species index | p. 244 |
Subject index | p. 246 |
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