Abstract

Using results from a long-term study of fine-scale dynamics in grasslands in four widely separated study areas from two continents, we provide further evidence to support the idea of the carousel model as an aid to describe the high fine-scale temporal and spatial species mobility found in grassland communities. Cumulative species numbers on small subplots in plots situated in stable plant communities, determined as the sum of species appearing in these subplots in one or more years over a period of time, are very high. In floristically different species-rich grasslands, varying from moist pine savannas in North Carolina and Mississippi, to humid chalk grassland in the Netherlands and seasonally dry limestone grassland in Sweden, average species numbers on subplots of 0.01 m2 in plots of 2.5 m2 over the period 1985–1989 were similar, most plots falling in the range 10.8–13.2. The total cumulative species numbers were similar as well, most plots falling in the range 17.4 and 20.9. Yearly average species numbers remained relatively constant. Considerable species turnover is occurring in all these communities; on average three species appear and three disappear each year in each 0.01 m2 subplot. Total species accumulation on 0.01 m2 subplots over the period 1985–1989 varied considerably, from 4.1 to 11.6, and is correlated with the cumulative species total on the plot, the latter figure being considered as correlated with the size of the species pool.

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