Litterfall in two deciduous woods in Ontario, Canada, was caught in bag traps and by new screen traps for two years. The beech‐maple wood produced 818 g m−2 (8.2 t ha−1) and the poplar wood produced only 450 g m−2 (4.5 t ha−1). Of these totals, canopy leaves alone made up 386 g m−2 for the beech‐maple wood and 270 g m−2 for the poplar wood leaving 47% and 34%, espectively, for other litter components. Data are presented for seven types of litter in addition to canopy leaves.Redistribution of litter on the ground causes spatial heterogeneity of substrate and of habitats for decomposers and hence of decomposition.Temporal distributions of various types of litterfall differ between the two woods in relation to their vegetation structure. The diversity of litter types combines with extensive temporal distribution of litterfall in the beech‐maple woodland to give that wood the potential for nearly continuous decomposition activity. In contrast, the poplar woodland has low diversity of litter and short duration of litterfall.