Abstract

Abstract. In this study we used species inventory data collected in 1970 and 1993 from 132 plots in a 14.5ha deciduous forest to examine local extinction and colonization processes among 45 field layer species. Local colonization rate was positively related to both seed size and seed dispersal features. Local extinction rate was negatively related to seed size. Growth form (clonal vs. non‐clonal) and presence of a seed bank were not found to be associated with local dynamics. Despite an overall constancy in species composition during this period, plants exhibited a considerable mobility among the 132 plots. This pattern conformed to a suggested ‘carousel model’ of species mobility in grasslands. A tentative suggestion is that this mobility acts on a comparatively broader spatio‐temporal scale in deciduous forests as compared with grasslands. Additional data are presented indicating that species abundance (frequency) among field layer plants in deciduous forest communities is consistent among forest fragments, and when comparing local and regional scales. The main conclusion is that life history features of the seed dispersal/recruitment phase, particularly seed size, are causally associated with abundance patterns at least at a local scale, but possibly also on a broader regional scale.

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