Menzerath's law, the tendency of Z, the mean size of the parts, to decrease
as X, the number of parts, increases is found in language, music and genomes.
Recently, it has been argued that the presence of the law in genomes is an
inevitable consequence of the fact that Z = Y/X, which would imply that Z
scales with X as Z ~ 1/X. That scaling is a very particular case of
Menzerath-Altmann law that has been rejected by means of a correlation test
between X and Y in genomes, being X the number of chromosomes of a species, Y
its genome size in bases and Z the mean chromosome size. Here we review the
statistical foundations of that test and consider three non-parametric tests
based upon different correlation metrics and one parametric test to evaluate if
Z ~ 1/X in genomes. The most powerful test is a new non-parametric based upon
the correlation ratio, which is able to reject Z ~ 1/X in nine out of eleven
taxonomic groups and detect a borderline group. Rather than a fact, Z ~ 1/X is
a baseline that real genomes do not meet. The view of Menzerath-Altmann law as
inevitable is seriously flawed.Comment: version improved with a new table, new histograms and a more accurate
statistical analysis; a new interpetation of the results is offered; notation
has undergone minor correction