[On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin]@TWC D-Link bookOn the Origin of Species CHAPTER VI 4/54  
 We see the same fact in ascending mountains, and sometimes it  is quite remarkable how abruptly, as Alph.De Candolle has observed, a  common alpine species disappears. 
  The same fact has been noticed by E.     Forbes in sounding the depths of the sea with the dredge. 
  To those who  look at climate and the physical conditions of life as the all-important  elements of distribution, these facts ought to cause surprise, as  climate and height or depth graduate away insensibly. 
  But when we  bear in mind that almost every species, even in its metropolis, would  increase immensely in numbers, were it not for other competing species;  that nearly all either prey on or serve as prey for others; in short,  that each organic being is either directly or indirectly related in the  most important manner to other organic beings--we see that the range  of the inhabitants of any country by no means exclusively depends  on insensibly changing physical conditions, but in large part on  the presence of other species, on which it lives, or by which it is  destroyed, or with which it comes into competition; and as these species  are already defined objects, not blending one into another by insensible  gradations, the range of any one species, depending as it does on the  range of others, will tend to be sharply defined. 
  Moreover, each species  on the confines of its range, where it exists in lessened numbers, will,  during fluctuations in the number of its enemies or of its prey, or in  the nature of the seasons, be extremely liable to utter extermination;  and thus its geographical range will come to be still more sharply  defined.       As allied or representative species, when inhabiting a continuous area,  are generally distributed in such a manner that each has a wide range,  with a comparatively narrow neutral territory between them, in which  they become rather suddenly rarer and rarer; then, as varieties do not  essentially differ from species, the same rule will probably apply to  both; and if we take a varying species inhabiting a very large area,  we shall have to adapt two varieties to two large areas, and a third  variety to a narrow intermediate zone. 
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