Colonization cycles in man and beast
- 1 February 1977
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in World Archaeology
- Vol. 8 (3) , 249-261
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00438243.1977.9979671
Abstract
Pre‐industrial man and other animal species are compared with respect to colonization cycles, i.e. the cycles of population expansion and contraction that provide the historical basis for instantaneous biological distribution patterns. Because every species is basically different from every other species, biogeography has developed a common framework for understanding such unlike distributions as those of giraffes, oak trees and man by seeking relations among key variables or processes relevant to any species. Like other species, man reproduces, dies, disperses, exploits environments of varying stability and productivity, adapts phenotypically and genetically, is subject to intraspecific competition and ‐ still like other species ‐ differs from other species in particular characteristics of each of these processes. These key ingredients for biogeographic analysis are discussed to inquire in what ways man is unique as a colonist.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Island biologyPublished by Smithsonian Institution ,1974
- Distributional Ecology of New Guinea BirdsScience, 1973
- Taxon Cycles in the West Indian AvifaunaThe American Naturalist, 1972
- Island Patterns in the Solomon Islands Bird FaunaEvolution, 1968
- Avifauna: Turnover on IslandsScience, 1965
- House Sparrows: Rapid Evolution of Races in North AmericaScience, 1964
- Animal Species and EvolutionPublished by Harvard University Press ,1963
- The Nature of the Taxon Cycle in the Melanesian Ant FaunaThe American Naturalist, 1961
- Possible Evidence of Rapid Evolution in Hawaiian MothsEvolution, 1960
- Die Ausbreitung des Girlitz (Serinus canaria serinus L.)Journal of Ornithology, 1926