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#### Text 1<br/><br/>What factors influence the abundance of species in a given ecological community? Some theorists have argued that historical diversity is a major driver of how diverse an ecological community eventually becomes: differences in community diversity across otherwise similar habitats, in this view, are strongly affected by the number of species living in those habitats at earlier times.<br/><br/>Text 2<br/><br/>In 2010, a group of researchers including biologist Carla Caceres created artificial pools in a New York forest. They stocked some pools with a diverse mix of zooplankton species and others with a single zooplankton species and allowed the pool communities to develop naturally thereafter. Over the course of four years, Caceres and colleagues periodically measured the species diversity of the pools, finding--contrary to their expectations--that by the end of the study there was little to no difference in the pools' species diversity.<br/><br/>Based on the texts, how would Caceres and colleagues (Text 2) most likely describe the view of the theorists presented in Text 1?