particular species being evident over the period
since 1979 (Bush et al. 1992; Whittaker et al. 1998).
The business of forest succession is ongoing.
A dispersal-structured model of island recolonization
The community-level changes have been under-
pinned by trends within the colonization data
134 COMMUNITY ASSEMBLY AND DYNAMICS
(Whittakeret al. 1989, 1992a). Figure 5.6 simplifies
these trends into three time-slices, restricting the
treatment to the island of Rakata, for which the best
data (least confounded by volcanic disturbance) are
available. The figures are for all species recorded
from the island, whether still present or not
(Whittaker and Jones 1994a). Phase 1 represents the
pioneering stage during which wind-dispersed pio-
neers, first ferns, and then grasses and composites
Sea Animal
Wind
Colonization rate increases as
attraction to frugivores increases
Pioneers lose ground
Colonization
continues at a
reduced pace
0.18
Ferns
1.18 1.32
0.86
Other
Sea Animal
Wind
Habitat
restrictions only
Species with large, heavy,
winged seeds, such as
many mature forest
canopy trees
Restricted groups:
colonization improbable
Large seeded bat-spread
or terrestrial mammal-spread
species
Animal
Wind
Delayed
colonization
of interior
Phase 1
Rapid colonization
of strand-line
Simple succession
1.64
0.14
1.0
Ferns
1.0
Other
Wind
0.83
Ferns
0.83
Other
0.29 1.26
Phase 3
Colonization rate declines
Diplochorous species
spread to interior by
birds and bats
More forest trees arrive
Local populations of bats
and birds critical to
mozaic development
Sea Sea Animal
Phase 2
(ferns, grasses, composites) as habitat availability increases
Rapid colonization of interior by pioneers Forest epiphytes increase
Figure 5.6Plant recolonization of Rakata Island (Krakatau group) since sterilization in 1883. The three phases correspond with survey periods
and represent convenient subdivisions of the successional process. Phase 1, 1883–1897; phase 2, 1898–1919; phase 3, 1920–1989. Arrow
widths are proportional to the increase in cumulative species number in species/year (these values are also given by each arrow). The flora is
subdivided into the primary dispersal categories, i.e. the means by which each species is considered most likely to have colonized: animal-
dispersed (zoochorous), wind-dispersed (anemochorous), and sea-dispersed (thalassochorous). The model distinguishes between strand-line (outer
circle) and interior habitats and, in the fourth figure, identifies constraints on further colonization. (From Whittaker and Jones 1994 a.)