The “Paradox of the Plankton” was the response of Hutchinson (1961) to the apparent violation of the Principle of Competitive Exclusion in phytoplankton communities. One explanation for phytoplankton associations was that communities exist in a perpetual nonequilibrium and competition is never allowed to proceed to exclusion. However, current ecological theory argues that disturbance does not preclude the importance of niche differences among species, including those that involve competitive processes. I collected phytoplankton and limnological data over the winter mixing period in two monomictic reservoirs to determine if niche differences between species are relevant during mixing. I used ordination to assess the importance of en...
Biodiversity has both fascinated and puzzled biologists(1). In aquatic ecosystems, the biodiversity ...
In a paper entitled The paradox of the plankton, Hutchinson asked 'how it is possible for a number o...
The principle of competitive exclusion states that, in equilibrium, the amount of coexisting species...
The “Paradox of the Plankton” was the response of Hutchinson (1961) to the apparent violation of th...
In a classical paper, Hutchinson (1961) argued that the large number of species in most plankton com...
In a classical paper, Hutchinson (1961) argued that the large number of species in most plankton com...
In a classical paper, Hutchinson (1961) argued that the large number of species in most plankton com...
In a classical paper, Hutchinson (1961) argued that the large number of species in most plankton com...
This paper is a reflection on J.B. Wilson's (1990) publication which presents an attempt to understa...
In plankton ecology, it is a fundamental question as to how a large number of competing phytoplankto...
G. E. Hutchinson raised the paradox of how a number of phytoplankton species competing for the same ...
Our understanding on phytoplankton diversity has largely been progressing since the publication of H...
PublishedThe diversity of phytoplankton species and their relationship to nutrient resources are exa...
Hutchinson (1961) first posed the paradox of the plankton: Why do so many phytoplankton species coex...
The diversity of phytoplankton species and their relationship to nutrient resources are examined usi...
Biodiversity has both fascinated and puzzled biologists(1). In aquatic ecosystems, the biodiversity ...
In a paper entitled The paradox of the plankton, Hutchinson asked 'how it is possible for a number o...
The principle of competitive exclusion states that, in equilibrium, the amount of coexisting species...
The “Paradox of the Plankton” was the response of Hutchinson (1961) to the apparent violation of th...
In a classical paper, Hutchinson (1961) argued that the large number of species in most plankton com...
In a classical paper, Hutchinson (1961) argued that the large number of species in most plankton com...
In a classical paper, Hutchinson (1961) argued that the large number of species in most plankton com...
In a classical paper, Hutchinson (1961) argued that the large number of species in most plankton com...
This paper is a reflection on J.B. Wilson's (1990) publication which presents an attempt to understa...
In plankton ecology, it is a fundamental question as to how a large number of competing phytoplankto...
G. E. Hutchinson raised the paradox of how a number of phytoplankton species competing for the same ...
Our understanding on phytoplankton diversity has largely been progressing since the publication of H...
PublishedThe diversity of phytoplankton species and their relationship to nutrient resources are exa...
Hutchinson (1961) first posed the paradox of the plankton: Why do so many phytoplankton species coex...
The diversity of phytoplankton species and their relationship to nutrient resources are examined usi...
Biodiversity has both fascinated and puzzled biologists(1). In aquatic ecosystems, the biodiversity ...
In a paper entitled The paradox of the plankton, Hutchinson asked 'how it is possible for a number o...
The principle of competitive exclusion states that, in equilibrium, the amount of coexisting species...