Abstract

Cultures of freshwater algae were assembled into artificial communities consisting of 2, 3, 4 and 8 species. The same species were also grown simultaneously in unialgal cultures in separate containers. Different combinations of algae in the same-sized artificial communities were grown three times for 17 weeks. Data obtained from the algae grown separately were treated in the same manner as those from algae grown in the artificial communities. The algae grown as unicultures in separate containers were found to grow in a descending order of abundance: a hierarchical order. When they grew as part of a community, several things happened: (1) all species were inhibited in growth; (2) the inhibition among the species was not uniform; (3) the species often exchanged numerical position in the hierarchy; and (4) the hierarchical order always increased, the degree of hierarchy being determined from the formula −Σpi ln pi . The greater hierarchy in the communities means there was less evenness of numerical distribut...

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