Dear morphometers,

In the search for biological diversity, the study of taxonomy, and the
delimitation of species we often look for evidence allowing us to
establish  concrete boundaries among populations or taxa. For this, we
usually obtain measurements of characters like the length (or shape) of
the skull or other parts of the body (something similar occurs in the
genetic realm of the problem, although this does not concerns the
present case).

In this context, my question concerns Cohen's effect size and the
standards for defining small, medium or large differences between
groups. The problem is that there is apparently no available discussion
upon which values of this index should be considered large in the
framework of species differentiation.

Cohen (in his book Statistical power analysis for the behavioral
sciences) is explicit in explaining that his standards for effect size
(Cohen's d) may only apply to studies concerning the social sciences,
that is d=0.2 (small), d=0.4 (medium), d=0.8 (large). I have tried to
find discussions concerning species differentiation and the application
of Cohen's d, but there is apparently little or none available.

Does anyone have an idea of what could be called large when dealing with
species differences? I know there is probably no answer to this
question, since there is no standard for the wide range of sizes and
shapes in biological entities. In any case, I was hoping someone could
provide me with a reference or citation that could bring some light into
this issue.

Thanks for all your help.

Pablo

Palo Jarrin
Grad. Student
Dept. of Biology
Boston University



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