Abstract

Certain fossil communities may be recognized in collections from Early—mid-Middle Ordovician age rock units in the Inyo Mountains, California, and the Bare and Ranger Mountains in adjacent Nevada. These dominantly brachiopod—tribolite communities lived in several different, shallow shelf-sea environments. The communities appear to have maintained their diversity and evenness within relatively narrow limits for as long as the major aspects of the environments in which they lived, remained little changed (periods of about 1–2 m.y.). Some taxa occur in several communities (and are called wide-niched), and some occur in only a single community (and are called narrow-niched). Certain taxa that occur in large numbers in a single community appear to have been far more tolerant of particular environmental conditions than were associated taxa in the same community that are represented by few individuals. Counts of such abundant taxa that are restricted to a single community (and are thus considered narrow-niched) compared with counts of the individuals of those taxa found in several communities (and thus are considered wide-niched) indicate that the taxa highly tolerant of particular environmental conditions may be represented by more individuals than are the wide-niched taxa.

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