Plant Ecology - Chapter 12 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Plant Ecology - Chapter 12

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Leads to disappearance of everything, species included. Autotropic succession ... Habitat continually occupied by living organisms. Two types of autotropic succession ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant Ecology - Chapter 12


1
Plant Ecology - Chapter 12
  • Disturbance Succession

2
Succession
  • Temporal patterns in communities
  • Replacement of species by others within
    particular habitat (colonization and extinction)
  • Non-seasonal, continuous, directional

3
Degradative succession
  • Decomposers breaking down organic matter
  • Leads to disappearance of everything, species
    included

4
Autotropic succession
  • Does not lead to degradation
  • Habitat continually occupied by living organisms

5
Two types of autotropic succession
  • Allogenic succession
  • Autogenic succession

6
Allogenic succession
  • Serial replacement of species driven by changing
    external geophysical processes
  • Examples
  • 1) silt deposition changing aquatic habitat to
    terrestrial habitat
  • 2) increasing salinity of Great Salt Lake

7
Autogenic succession
  • Change of species driven by biological processes
    changing conditions and/or resources
  • Example organisms living, then dying, on bare
    rock

8
Autogenic succession can occur under 2 different
conditions
  • In an area that previously supported a community,
    but now does not
  • Secondary succession
  • Example terrestrial habitat where vegetation was
    destroyed, but soil remained
  • In an area that previously did not support any
    community
  • Primary succession
  • Example terrestrial habitat devoid of soil

9
Disturbances
  • Relatively discreet event in time that causes
    abrupt change in ecosystem, community, or
    population structure
  • Changes resource availability, substrate
    availability, or the physical environment

10
Disturbances
  • Intensity, size, frequency
  • Small disturbances of low intensity are much more
    frequent than large disturbances of high intensity

11
Disturbances
  • Gaps
  • Fire
  • Wind
  • Water
  • Animals
  • Earthquakes, volcanoes
  • Disease
  • Humans

12
Primary succession
  • Volcanic eruptions
  • Glaciers

13
Secondarysuccession
  • Floods
  • Fires

14
Rate of succession
  • Primary - slow - may take 1000s of years
  • Secondary - faster - fraction of the time to
    reach same stage

15
Autogenic succession begins
  • First community comprised of r-selected
    species - pioneer species

16
r-selected species
  • Good colonizers
  • Tolerant of harsh conditions
  • Reproduce quickly in unpredictable environs
  • Example lichens

17
r-selected species
  • Primary - colonized by seeds, spores, via wind,
    water
  • Secondary - wind-dispersed seeds, seed banks

18
Pioneer species
  • Carry out life processes and begin to modify
    habitat
  • Extract resources from bare rock
  • Break up/fragment rock with roots
  • Collect wind-blown dust, particles
  • Waste products accumulate
  • Die and decompose
  • Soil development begins

19
Continuing change
  • Colonizers joined by other species suited for
    modified habitat
  • Eventually replace colonizers
  • Better competitors in modified habitat
  • Less r-selected, more K-selected

20
More change
  • Communities may gradually become dominated by
    K-selected species
  • Good competitors, able to coexist with others for
    long periods of time

21
Stability
  • Communities may become stabilized on some scale
  • Reach equilibrium (dynamic)
  • Little or no change in species composition,
    abundance over long periods of time
  • Climax community
  • End stage of succession

22
Will climax stage be reached?
  • Rarely is climax stage reached quickly
  • Slow succession most common, climax stage almost
    never achieved
  • Community usually affected by some major
    disturbance (e.g., fire) before climax stage is
    reached
  • Resets succession, forces it to start again from
    some earlier stage

23
Terrestrial succession
24
Relay Floristics
25
Relay Floristics
26
Predictability of Succession
Deterministic- process with a fixed outcome
Community restoration via succession?
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