Many of these indexes were markedly influenced by sample size. The rarefaction methodology was compared with a number of diversity indexes using identical data. Our data indicated that species number is the more valid diversity measurement. The two types of diversity, based on numerical percentage composition and on number of species, were compared and shown to be poorly correlated with each other. A stability-time hypothesis was invoked to fit these findings, and, with this hypothesis, predictions were made about the diversities present in certain other environments as yet unstudied. The resulting diversity values were highly correlated with the physical stability and past history of these environments. By the use of this technique, a within-habitat analysis was made of the bivalve and polychaete components of soft-bottom marine faunas which differed in latitude, depth, temperature, and salinity. In this paper a methodology is presented for measuring diversity based on rarefaction of actual samples.
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