Linearity of Geographic Range and Its Possible Effect on the Population Structure of Andean Birds
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Auk
- Vol. 105 (1) , 47-52
- https://doi.org/10.1093/auk/105.1.47
Abstract
Geographic ranges of widespread Andean forest bird species are linear, averaging over 300 times longer than they are wide. Among congeneric species, geographic variation in plumage was negatively correlated to the width (W) of their elevational distributions, presumably because narrower distributions are more easily fragmented by barriers to gene flow. The amplitude of a species' elevational distribution may be limited by zonation of resources and by genetic factors that prevent populations from adapting to local environments. Minimum amplitudes may be dictated by demographic consequences.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Units of measurement for fractal extent, applied to the coastal distribution of bald eagle nests in the Aleutian Islands, AlaskaOecologia, 1985
- The Role of Ecotones in the Distribution of Andean BirdsEcology, 1985
- Elevational Correlates of Speciation and Intraspecific Geographic Variation in Plumage in Andean Forest BirdsThe Auk, 1985
- Permanent Canopy and Understory Flocks in Amazonia: Species Composition and Population DensityOrnithological Monographs, 1985
- Latitudinal Pattern of Between-Altitude Faunal Similarity: Mountains Might be "Higher" in the TropicsThe American Naturalist, 1978
- THE STEPPING STONE MODEL OF POPULATION STRUCTURE AND THE DECREASE OF GENETIC CORRELATION WITH DISTANCEGenetics, 1964
- Isolation by distance1943