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The theory of island biogeography ([New ed.])

Part of the Princeton Landmarks in Biology series
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Biogeography was stuck in a "natural history phase" dominated by the collection of data, the young Princeton biologists Robert H.

MacArthur and Edward O. Wilson argued in 1967. In this book the authors developed a general theory to explain the facts of island biogeography.

The theory builds on the first principles of population ecology and genetics to explain how distance and area combine to regulate the balance between immigration and extinction in island populations.

The authors then test the theory against data. The Theory of Island Biogeography was never intended as the last word on the subject.

Instead, MacArthur and Wilson sought to stimulate "new forms of theoretical and empirical studies, which will lead in turn to a stronger general theory." Even a third of a century since its publication, the book continues to serve that purpose well.

From popular books like David Quammen's Song of the Dodo to arguments in the profeessional literature.

The Theory of Island Biogeography remains at the center of discussions about the geographic distribution of species.

In a new preface, Edward O. Wilson reviews the origins and consequences of this classic book.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691088365 / 9780691088365
Paperback / softback
578.752
18/03/2001
United States
English
xv, 203 p. : ill.
22 cm
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Previous ed.: 1967.
MacArthur and Wilson's is arguably the most influential book in biogeography in the last hundred years. With its emphasis on on-going processes of colonization and extinction, it provided a new framework to explain patterns in species diversity and served as a counterpoint to hypotheses relying on chance and solitary historical events. Many of the antecedents for what we now call conservation biology, invasion biology, and landscape ecology had their origins here. -- Ted Case, University of California, San Diego
MacArthur and Wilson's is arguably the most influential book in biogeography in the last hundred years. With its emphasis on on-going processes of colonization and extinction, it provided a new framework to explain patterns in species diversity and served as a counterpoint to hypotheses relying on chance and solitary historical events. Many of the antecedents for what we now call conservation biology, invasion biology, and landscape ecology had their origins here. -- Ted Case, University of California, San Diego PSAF Ecological science, the Biosphere, RGM Biogeography