Over recent decades, studies on post-dispersal seed predation have revealed some general patterns despite dealing with a highly variable phenomenon (reviews in Crawley 1993, Hulme 1998). Most of these studies, however, were carried out with plant species whose population density range from low to moderately high (Hulme 1998). Only rarely has seed predation been studied in very dense stands of a given plant species (Schupp 1988a, b, 1992). In such a situation, seed predators might respond to the local availability of seeds in a manner that differs from their response under conditions of low seed density. For instance, a high density of seeds beneath a fruiting plant may attract seed predators, causing a positive correlation between predation and seed density (Janzen 1970). Schupp (1992), however, noted that at a population scale, a high density of seeds could satiate predators, resulting in a negative correlation between predation and seed density (see also Burkey 1994).