Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by...

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Community Ecology Chapter 9

Transcript of Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by...

Page 1: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Community Ecology

Chapter 9

Page 2: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Succession

Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within

particular habitat (colonization and extinction)

Non-seasonal, continuous, directional

Page 3: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Degradative succession Decomposers breaking down organic

matter Leads to disappearance of everything,

species included

Page 4: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

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

organisms

Page 5: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Two types of autotropic succession Allogenic succession

Autogenic succession

Page 6: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

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

Page 7: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Autogenic succession Change of species driven by biological

processes changing conditions and/or resources

Example: organisms living, then dying, on bare rock

Page 8: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Autogenic succession can occur under 2 different conditions In an area that

previously did not support any community

Primary succession Example: terrestrial

habitat devoid of soil

In an area that previously supported a community, but now does not

Secondary succession Example: terrestrial

habitat where vegetation was destroyed, but soil remained

Page 9: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Primary succession Volcanic eruptions

Glaciers

Page 10: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Secondarysuccession Floods

Fires

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Rate of succession Primary - slow - may take 1000s of years

Secondary - faster - fraction of the time to reach same stage

Page 12: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Autogenic succession begins… First community comprised of r-selected

species - pioneer species

Page 13: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

r-selected species Good colonizers Tolerant of harsh conditions Reproduce quickly in unpredictable

environs

Example: lichens

Page 14: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

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

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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

Page 16: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

More change Communities gradually become dominated

by K-selected species Good competitors, able to coexist with

others for long periods of time

Page 17: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Stability Communities become stabilized Reach equilibrium Little or no change in species composition,

abundance over long periods of time Climax community End stage of succession

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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

Page 19: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Terrestrial succession

Page 20: Community Ecology Chapter 9. Succession Temporal patterns in communities Replacement of species by others within particular habitat (colonization and.

Lake or pond succession