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Many animals, including humans, tend to live in groups,
herd A herd is a social group of certain animals of the same species, either wild or domestic. The form of collective animal behavior associated with this is called ''herding''. These animals are known as gregarious animals. The term ''herd'' i ...
s,
flocks Flocking is the behaviour exhibited when a group of birds, called a flock, are foraging or in flight. Computer simulations and mathematical models that have been developed to emulate the flocking behaviours of birds can also generally be applie ...
, bands, packs, shoals, or
colonies In modern parlance, a colony is a territory subject to a form of foreign rule. Though dominated by the foreign colonizers, colonies remain separate from the administration of the original country of the colonizers, the '' metropolitan state'' ...
(hereafter: groups) of conspecific individuals. The size of these groups, as expressed by the number of people/etc in a group such as eight groups of nine people in each one, is an important aspect of their social environment. Group size tend to be highly variable even within the same species, thus we often need statistical measures to quantify group size and statistical tests to compare these measures between two or more samples. Group size measures are notoriously hard to handle statistically since groups sizes typically follow an aggregated (right-skewed) distribution: most groups are small, few are large, and a very few are very large. Statistical measures of group size roughly fall into two categories.


Outsiders' view of group size

* Group size is the number of individuals within a group; * Mean group size, the
arithmetic mean In mathematics and statistics, the arithmetic mean ( ) or arithmetic average, or just the ''mean'' or the ''average'' (when the context is clear), is the sum of a collection of numbers divided by the count of numbers in the collection. The coll ...
of group sizes averaged over groups; * Confidence interval for mean group size; * Median group size, the median of group sizes calculated over groups; * Confidence interval for median group size.


Insiders' view of group size

As Jarman (1974) pointed out, average individuals live in groups larger than average. Therefore, when we wish to characterize a typical (average) individual’s social environment, we should apply non-parametric estimations of group size. Reiczigel et al. (2008) proposed the following measures: * Crowding is the size (the number of individuals) of a group that a particular individual lives in (equals to group size: one for a solitary individual, two for both individuals in a group of two, etc.). Practically, it describes the social environment of one particular individual. This was called ''Individual Group Size'' in Jovani & Mavor's (2011) paper.; * Mean crowding, i.e. the
arithmetic mean In mathematics and statistics, the arithmetic mean ( ) or arithmetic average, or just the ''mean'' or the ''average'' (when the context is clear), is the sum of a collection of numbers divided by the count of numbers in the collection. The coll ...
of crowding measures averaged over individuals (this was called "Typical Group Size" according to Jarman's 1974 terminology); * Confidence interval for mean crowding.


Example

Imagine a sample with three groups, where group sizes are one, two, and six individuals, respectively, then : mean group size (group sizes averaged over groups) equals (1+2+6)/3=3; : mean crowding (group sizes averaged over individuals) equals (1+2+2+6+6+6+6+6+6)/9=4.555. Generally speaking, given there are G groups with sizes n1, n2, ..., nG, mean crowding can be calculated as: : mean crowding= \sum_^G n^2_i/\sum_^G n_i


Statistical methods

Due to the aggregated (right-skewed) distribution of group members among groups, the application of parametric statistics would be misleading. Another problem arises when analyzing crowding values. Crowding data consist of non-independent values, or ties, which show multiple and simultaneous changes due to a single biological event. (Say, all group members' crowding values change simultaneously whenever an individual joins or leaves.) Reiczigel et al. (2008) discuss the statistical problems associated with group size measures (calculating confidence intervals, two-sample tests, etc.) and offer a free statistical toolset (Flocker 1.1).


Literature

* Debout G 2003. Le corbeau freux (Corvus frugilegus) nicheur en Normandie: recensement 1999 & 2000. ''Cormoran,'' 13, 115–121. * Jarman PJ 1974. The social organisation of antelope in relation to their ecology. ''Behaviour'', 48, 215–268. * Jovani R, Mavor R 2011
Group size versus individual group size frequency distributions: a nontrivial distinction.
''Animal Behaviour'', 82, 1027–1036. * Lengyel S, Tar J, Rozsa L 2012
Flock size measures of migrating Lesser White-fronted Geese Anser erythropus
''Acta Zoologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae'', 58, 297–303. (2012) * Reiczigel J, Lang Z, Rózsa L, Tóthmérész B 2008
Measures of sociality: two different views of group size.
''Animal Behaviour'', 75, 715–721. * Reiczigel J, Mejía Salazar MF, Bollinger TK, Rozsa L 2015
Comparing radio-tracking and visual detection methods to quantify group size measures.
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European Journal of Ecology The ''European Journal of Ecology'' is an English-language, biannual, scientific journal founded in 2015. It publishes original, peer-reviewed papers (in categories like research articles, reviews, forum articles, policy directions) referring to a ...
'', 1(2), 1–4.


See also

Size of groups, organizations, and communities


External links


Flocker 1.1 – a statistical toolset to analyze group size measures (with all the abovementioned calculations available)


Gallery

Image:Sa aphid colony highres.jpg, An
aphid Aphids are small sap-sucking insects and members of the superfamily Aphidoidea. Common names include greenfly and blackfly, although individuals within a species can vary widely in color. The group includes the fluffy white woolly aphids. A t ...
colony Image:Yellow Paper Wasp.jpg, European paper wasp colony Image:Lutjanus kasmira school.jpg,
Bluestripe snapper The common bluestripe snapper (''Lutjanus kasmira''), bluestripe snapper, bluebanded snapper, bluestripe sea perch, fourline snapper, blue-line snapper or moonlighter, is a species of marine ray-finned fish, a snapper belonging to the family Lut ...
schooling. Image:Flamingos flying.jpg, Flamingos Image:Tölpelperce.jpg,
Gannet Gannets are seabirds comprising the genus ''Morus'' in the family Sulidae, closely related to boobies. Gannets are large white birds with yellowish heads; black-tipped wings; and long bills. Northern gannets are the largest seabirds in the ...
colony Image:Common Coots I IMG 9270.jpg,
Common coot The Eurasian coot (''Fulica atra''), also known as the common coot, or Australian coot, is a member of the rail and crake bird family, the Rallidae. It is found in Europe, Asia, Australia, New Zealand and parts of North Africa. It has a slaty-bla ...
s Image:Great Woodswallow group.jpg,
Great woodswallow The great woodswallow (''Artamus maximus''), also known as the greater woodswallow, giant woodswallow or New Guinea woodswallow is a species of bird in the family Artamidae. As its name implies, it is the largest member of the genus ''Artamus'', a ...
s allopreening. Image:Red-billed quelea flocking at waterhole.jpg,
Red-billed quelea The red-billed quelea (; ''Quelea quelea''), also known as the red-billed weaver or red-billed dioch, is a small—approximately long and weighing —migratory, sparrow-like bird of the weaver family, Ploceidae, native to Sub-Saharan Africa. ...
flock Image:Canis lupus pack surrounding Bison.jpg, Wolf pack hunting Image:Wild Dog Kruger National Park South Africa.jpg,
African wild dog The African wild dog (''Lycaon pictus''), also called the painted dog or Cape hunting dog, is a wild canine which is a native species to sub-Saharan Africa. It is the largest wild canine in Africa, and the only extant member of the genus '' Lyc ...
s Image:Elephant seal colony edit.jpg, Elephant seals Image:Vicugna vicugna.JPG, Vicuñas Image:Dolphins gesture language.jpg,
Bottlenose dolphin Bottlenose dolphins are aquatic mammals in the genus ''Tursiops.'' They are common, cosmopolitan members of the family Delphinidae, the family of oceanic dolphins. Molecular studies show the genus definitively contains two species: the comm ...
s Image:CapeBuffalo-Mara.JPG, African buffalo herd Image:ARS sheep herding.jpg, Sheep flock
{{collective animal behaviour Behavioural sciences Ethology Sociobiology Behavioral ecology Group processes Herding Statistical inference