“…In [5] it is speculated that similar principles may apply more generally to community assembly, for there are examples of the number of species with the number of sites occupied being distributed exponentially in populations of heteroflagellates and of tree species in the seasonally dry tropical forests of Mexico. Having clarified in [6] the roles of the alien species' exponentials, we have returned to the dry forests of Mexico, where the data [7] contain not only the exponential distribution of the number of species with the number of sites (which first drew our attention), but also list the number of species at each site, and beyond that the number of species common to each pair of sites. These three aspects of the data set are explained by a category of cosmopolitan species, distributed in accord with the model for alien species, and in addition, a category of specialists, endemic species found preferentially at high rank sites, i.e., those that are relatively species poor.…”