Summary
Group size distributions are instrumental in understanding group behaviour in animal populations. We analysed group size data of the blackbuck, Antilope cervicapra, from six different field sites to estimate the group size distribution of this antelope. We show that an exponentially truncated power law (called the polylog distribution in this paper) is the best fitting distribution, against the simple power law and lognormal distributions as other contenders, and the exponential distribution as a control. To show this, we use two likelihood based methods (AICs and likelihood ratios). Finally, we show that polylog distribution parameters can be used to better understand group dynamics, by using them to explore how habitat openness affects group behaviour.