The effect of predation on the structure and invasibility of assembled communities

Abstract
Fifty four microcosmic communities were assembled over 4 months from a 28-species source pool of phytoplankton using nine different invasion patterns each replicated six times. Three communities from each set of replicates then were invaded with a cladoceran that feeds on phytoplankton. All communities were then treated identically for an additional 4 months. In all nine invasion categories species richness was greater in predated communities. Predation opened communities to invasion by increasing the representation of infrequently sampled species at the expense of more common species. Invasion rate was four times more influential than predation and over eleven times more important than either invasion order or the timing pattern of interspecific arrivals in determining species richness in this system of communitites.