Abstract:The size hierachies of a perennial grass population, Elymus nutans, which distributes throghout the subalpine meadow has been studied. A two-year experiment was designed to include seven treatments of different densities and measurements of inequality and distributions of individual mass of the population at different harvest time from 1987 to 1989. Individual mass under each of the seven treatments did not reveal a normal or lognormal distribution. No skewness values smaller than 0.5 occurred in our 48 sets of data, which implied that the distribution of the indiciduals of E. nutans population at any density skewed to small individuals. This result emphasized an evidence that there were differences between perennial grasses and annual grasses in responding to intraspecies competition. Size inequality did not increase with increasing population densities. This however, was not in concert with the results of experiments from others. Size inequality, on the other hand, was wore prominent in the period of vegetative growth than in the period of maturity.