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Models of clines

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2016

D. Y. Downham*
Affiliation:
Department of Computational and Statistical Science, University of Liverpool

Extract

The imago of the peppered moth exists in two sharply distinguished forms, speckled and black. Clarke and Sheppard (1966) have shown that the frequency of the black moth decreases from 99% in Liverpool to 10% in North Wales. If these frequencies are in equilibrium, albeit dynamic equilibrium, then such a gradient is called a cline. Haldane (1948) briefly describes several clines, and then defines a model that may represent the life-cycle of certain species. The assumptions defining his model are as follows.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Applied Probability Trust 1974 

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References

Bishop, J. A. (1972) An experimental study of the cline of industrial melanism in Biston Betularia (Lepidoptera) between urban Liverpool and rural North Wales. Jour. Anim. Ec. 41, 209243.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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