[Taxacom] How many species have been reported only once

Doug Yanega dyanega at ucr.edu
Fri Mar 19 18:00:01 CDT 2010


>Does anyone know of analyses that explore this matter, or have any 
>data to confirm the proportion of 'once only' species in their 
>sphere of expertise?

I believe a major aspect of this is that only in certain disciplines 
do people routinely *document* occurrences of "miscellaneous" taxa. 
The proportion of bee species which have had anything published on 
them *aside from their original description* (and not counting 
catalog records) is a rather small proportion, yet many of those 
"single record" species are things which can be found in collections, 
sometimes fairly abundantly; but people don't often issue "county 
checklists" for bees, while they DO for things like butterflies or 
birds or herps, etc.

The bottom line is that hoping to use literature records to determine 
a general pattern is going to be very misleading if one compares 
broadly across taxa.

Sincerely,
-- 

Doug Yanega        Dept. of Entomology         Entomology Research Museum
Univ. of California, Riverside, CA 92521-0314        skype: dyanega
phone: (951) 827-4315 (standard disclaimer: opinions are mine, not UCR's)
              http://cache.ucr.edu/~heraty/yanega.html
   "There are some enterprises in which a careful disorderliness
         is the true method" - Herman Melville, Moby Dick, Chap. 82




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