Results/Conclusions IMs generally reduced species richness and diversity of the steady-state communities present at the end of the community assembly process. However, the effect depended both on the assumptions governing the IMs and on the pattern of direct linkages in the species pool. Surprisingly, functions for assigning IMs leading to lower mean consumptive strengths, which would have been expected to have been stabilizing, often had more negative or less positive effects on species richness and diversity than functions leading to higher mean strengths. The underlying pattern of consumptive links were also important: IMs had stronger and more consistently negative effects when consumers fed both on species one trophic level down and on species within their own trophic level than when species fed on prey one and two trophic levels down or when species only fed on prey one trophic level down (which was the only case where positive effects of IMs were seen). Within this last scenario, the effects of IMs also often became stronger as underlying trophic connectance increased. These models show that IMs' effects in large communities may be more nuanced than previously appreciated, but also suggest that there are some generalities concerning these to be found.