bookPrinceton University Press eBooksDec 31, 2011Closed access

The Unified Neutral Theory of Biodiversity and Biogeography (MPB-32)

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Abstract

Despite its supreme importance and the threat of its global crash, biodiversity remains poorly understood both empirically and theoretically. This ambitious book presents a new, general neutral theory to explain the origin, maintenance, and loss of biodiversity in a biogeographic context. Until now biogeography (the study of the geographic distribution of species) and biodiversity (the study of species richness and relative species abundance) have had largely disjunct intellectual histories. In this book, Stephen Hubbell develops a formal mathematical theory that unifies these two fields. When a speciation process is incorporated into Robert H. MacArthur and Edward O. Wilson's now classical theory of island…

Citation impact

816
total citations
FWCI
8.74
Percentile
100%
References
1
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biodiversity
  • Biogeography
  • Biological dispersal
  • Species richness
  • Neutral theory of molecular evolution
  • Ecology
  • Context (archaeology)
  • Insular biogeography
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Life in Land
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