Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the...

19
Ecological Succession

Transcript of Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the...

Page 1: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Ecological Succession

Page 2: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Ecological Succession

• Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem

• the gradual replacement of one community by another until a stable long-lasting stage is reached

Page 3: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Changes in the Community

QuickTime™ and aSorenson Video decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 4: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

What determines what the final Community will be????

• 1. Climate (temperature & moisture) and Soil Quality

• 2. In the U.P., the climate is pretty much the same, so differences in soil type influence the community type.

Page 5: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Four Basic Communities

• A. Pine

• B. Boreal Forest

• C. Northern Hardwoods

• D. Bog/Swamp

Page 6: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Why does Succession Happen?

• Each community alters the physical features of a site making it less favorable for its members and more favorable for competitors.

• In other words, each community brings about its own demise.

Page 7: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

How long does Succession Take?

• Succession depends on the size of the ecosystem but generally takes hundreds to thousands of years.

QuickTime™ and aSorenson Video decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 8: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Types of Succession• Primary Succession – soil building occurs

on previously uninhabited site

• Examples:– Bare rock lichen moss herbs trees– Sand dune grass blueberry

cherry/poplar trees

Page 9: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Pioneer Species

• The first species to occupy a bare site

• Characteristics: - tough (can endure extremes of temperature - lack of moisture - lack of nutrients

Page 10: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Secondary Succession• Occurs on a site on which the established

community has been removed (soil already present)

• Disturbances include: – Fire (commonly used to control undergrowth)– Farming– Logging– Over-grazing– Urbanization

Page 11: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Climax Community

• The eventual community that occupies the site after the disturbance – it will remain that way unless it is disturbed.

Page 12: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

• If a forest is removed, secondary succession begins with perennial weeds, poplar and cherry trees, and sometimes pine. Often fireweed is an indicator species of the stage.

• If the disturbance is severe enough, it may set it back to primary succession – may take a tremendously long time for climax community to be reached.

Page 13: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

• In general, as succession proceeds, food chains are replaced by food webs, there is more biomass and species diversity, and the ecosystem is more stable – what might destroy an early stage does not cause as great an effect at later stages

Page 14: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Make Up of a Community

• Depends on tolerances of the species involved

• Tolerance– 1. Shade tolerant species – can photosynthesize

adequately at very low levels of light ex. Maple, oak seedlings, certain species of fern

– 2. Shade intolerant species – require bright light to photosynthesize enough to survive ex. Cherry, poplar, grass

Page 15: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

How Does Succession Happen?

• Cherry/poplar seedlings colonize a disturbed site. As they grow, they shade the ground. Young cherry and poplar seedlings cannot grow in the shade but oak/maple seedlings thrive there. Eventually, oaks/maples shade the cherry and poplar trees, reducing the light to below the compensation intensity, and those trees die.

Page 16: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Indicator Species

• Species that live only in certain stages of succession or under very specific conditions

• Examples:– Yew – an evergreen shrub found

only in mature hardwood forests– Sphagnum moss – found only in

bogs and swamps

Page 17: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Disclimax Community

• Artificial communities that are maintained only by constant intervention by man ------ they are never allowed to reach the climax stage of succession

• Examples: park, farmer’s field, lawn

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 18: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

Ecotone• The transition zone

between two adjacent communities

• Example: Where a field blends into a forest -often there is a greater diversity of life in an ecotone, because the more tolerant species from each community can be found there

Page 19: Ecological Succession Series of changes that occur during the development of an ecosystem the gradual replacement of one community by another until a.

The End