The theory of island biogeography[1] asserts that an island or a local
community approaches an equilibrium species richness as a result of the
interplay between the immigration of species from the much larger metacommunity
source area and local extinction of species on the island (local community).
Hubbell[2] generalized this neutral theory to explore the expected steady-state
distribution of relative species abundance (RSA) in the local community under
restricted immigration. Here we present a theoretical framework for the unified
neutral theory of biodiversity[2] and an analytical solution for the
distribution of the RSA both in the metacommunity (Fisher's logseries) and in
the local community, where there are fewer rare species. Rare species are more
extinction-prone, and once they go locally extinct, they take longer to
re-immigrate than do common species. Contrary to recent assertions[3], we show
that the analytical solution provides a better fit, with fewer free parameters,
to the RSA distribution of tree species on Barro Colorado Island (BCI)[4] than
the lognormal distribution[5,6].Comment: 19 pages, 1 figur