“…The Florida Everglades is an ideal system to test these adaptive hypotheses because periphyton mats are the primary basal resource in this area (Browder, Gleason, & Swift, ; Trexler, Gaiser, Kominoski, & Sanchez, ) and are composed of complex assemblages of autotrophs (green algae, diatoms, and cyanobacteria) and heterotrophs (fungi and bacteria; Gaiser et al., ). Both autotroph and heterotroph components of Everglades periphyton communities respond rapidly to changes in water chemistry (Gottlieb, Gaiser, & Lee, ; Noe, Childers, & Jones, ; Pan, Stevenson, Vaithiyanathan, Slate, & Richardson, ), such as when phosphorus is added, because the Everglades ecosystem is naturally oligotrophic (Gaiser et al., ).…”