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2.4.2 Zonation and succession. What is Succession. Succession – a predictable sequence of changes, caused by the living things themselves, where an ecosystem develops from a simple colonizer community to a complex climax community. What is Succession.
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What is Succession • Succession – a predictable sequence of changes, caused by the living things themselves, where an ecosystem develops from a simple colonizer community to a complex climax community.
What is Succession • Succession – Orderly process of change over time in a community divided into stages called serals
Primary Succession • Involves the introduction of species into an area that has never previously been colonized
Stages of Primary Succession • Bare inorganic surface: Lifeless abiotic environment becomes available for colonization by pioneer plant, animal and lichen species. Soil is little more than mineral particles, nutrient poor and an erratic water supply. Time
Stages of Primary Succession Time • Stage 1 Colonization: First species to colonizer are pioneer species adapted to extreme conditions. Pioneer species are typically r-selected species showing small size, short life cycles, rapid growth and production of many offspring or seeds. Simple soil starts from windblown dust and mineral particles.
Stages of Primary Succession Time • Stage 2 Establishment: Species diversity increases. Invertebrates (no backbone) begin to visit and live in the soil, increasing humus (organic material) content and water-holding capacity. Weathering of rock enriches soil with nutrients.
Stages of Primary Succession Time • Stage 3 Competition: Microclimate continues to change as new species colonize. Larger plants increase cover and provide shelter, enabling K-selected species to become established. Temperature, sun and wind are less extreme. Earlier pioneer r-species are unable to compete with K species for space, nutrients or light and are lost from the community.
Stages of Primary Succession Time • Stage 4 Stabilization: Fewer new species colonize as late colonizers become established shading out early colonizers. Complex food webs develop. K-selected species are specialists with narrower niches. They are generally larger and less productive (slower growing) with longer life cycles and delayed reproduction.
Stages of Primary Succession Time • The final stage or climax community is stable and self-perpetuating. It exists in a steady-state dynamic equilibrium. The climax represents the maximum possible development that a community can reach under the prevailing environmental conditions of temperature, light and rainfall.
Primary Succession • Occurs in new lakes, ponds, cooled lava, sand dunes and bare rock • Ex - rock -> lichen -> moss -> grass -> shrub -> trees -> oak hickory forest
Secondary Succession • Secondary succession – when an already established community is suddenly destroyed/disturbed
Secondary Succession • Soils are already developed and ready to accept wind blown seeds. • E.g. Forest fire, flood, grazing, deforestation, human activity (plowing), etc.
The Stages of Succession • During succession, the following changes occur: • The size of the organisms increases with trees, creating a more hospitable environment. • Energy flow becomes more complex as simple food chains become complex food webs.
The Stages of Succession • Soil depth, humus, water-holding capacity, mineral content, and cycling all increase. • Biodiversity increases because more niches (lifestyle opportunities) appear and then falls as the climax community is reached. • NPP and GPP rise and then fall. • Productivity: Respiration ration falls.
Climax communities • Not necessarily dense forest. • There is no one climax community. • Many stable alternatives • Dependant on: • Climatic factors • Soil properties • Random events • **Complex ecosystems are more stable due to the variety of nutrient and energy pathways. • If one collapses its overall effect is low as there are many others to takes its place.
Secondary Succession • Succession that occurs where an area has been disturbed. • Ex - grass -> shrub -> trees -> oak hickory forest
Secondary Succession Mature oak and hickory forest Young pine forest with developing understory of oak and hickory trees Shrubs and small pine seedlings Perennial weeds and grasses Annual weeds Time
GPP and NP During Succession(a summary) Both biodiversity and mineral cycling increase strongly as succession progresses.
Biodiversity in Successions • In early stages of succession, there are only a few species within the community. As the community passes through subsequent stages, species diversity increases (to a point).
Secondary Succession • Human activities usually cause secondary succession. • Cutting for timber • Clearing for farming • Construction • Some Natural Causes • Forest fires • Volcanoes • Hurricanes • Tornados
Stages of Succession • Pioneer community – Earliest seral stage • Early Stages of Succession: • Gross Productivity: low • Respiration loss: low • Net Productivity: high • System: Growing • Biomass: Accumulating
Stages of Succession • Climax community – Final seral stage • Final Stages of Succession: • Gross Productivity: high • Respiration loss: high • Net Productivity: near 0 • Production/Respiration Ratio: Near 1
Climax Community • A climax community produced by the action of humans is called a PLAGIOCLIMAX. This may occur for the following reasons:
Climax Community • The introduction on non-native species • The effects of acid rain • The effects of global warming • Deforestation • The planting of crops
Climax Community • The grazing of cattle • Agricultural operations • Forestry • Deliberate maintenance of grasslands, heathlands and coppice woodlands • Land clearance • Fire
What is Zonation • Zonation –Zonation is the change in community along an environmental gradient due to factors such as changes in altitude, latitude, tidal level or distance from shore/coverage by water.
What is Zonation • Human activities alter zonation. Road building on mountains may allow tourism into previously inaccessible areas or deforestation or agriculture.
Zonation • Each species has an ecological niche (boundaries).The niches change as we increase the altitude. • Temperature – decreases with increasing altitude and latitude. • Precipitation—Higher up on mountains, the air is too dry and cold for trees. Most rainfall is in the middle altitudes where deciduous trees grow.
Zonation • Solar insolation—more intense at higher altitudes and plants have adapted to this. • Soil type—in warmer zones, decomposition is faster so soils are deeper and more fertile. Higher up, decomposition is slow with acidic soils. • Species interactions—competition may crowd out some species and grazing may alter plant composition. Mycorrhizal fungi may plan an important role in tree growth.
Succession vs Zonation(a comparison) Succession is how an ecosystem changes in time.
The Role of r and K strategists in Succession • Species can be roughly divided into K- and r- selected species. K and r are two variables that determine the shape of a population growth curve.
The Role of r and K strategists in Succession • K = carrying capacity • r = describes the exponential part of a growth curve. • K- and r- strategies describe the different approaches species take to getting their genes passed onto the next generation and ensuring the survival of the species.
The Role of r and K strategists in Succession • S-shape curve represents a population that is at carrying capacity (K-strategy species) • J-shape curve represents a population existing in an exponential phase of growth (r-strategy species)
r-strategist • Short life • Rapid growth • Early maturity • Numerous and small offspring • Little parental care or protection • Little investment in individual offspring • Adapted to unstable environment. • Pioneers, colonizers • Niche generalists • Prey • Regulated mainly by external factors • Lower trophic level
K-strategist • Long life • Slower growth • Late maturity • Fewer, but large offspring • High parental care and protection • High investment in individual offspring • Adapted to stable environment • Later stages of succession • Niche specialist • Predators • Regulated mainly by internal factors • Higher trophic level
Survivorship Curve • Limiting factors that affect the shape of the curve include predation, competition, environmental conditions. • Curve II is rare in that species have an equal chance of dying at any age (ex. Hydra and some bird species).
Activity: • Using sand dunes as an case study (pg. 121) outline the stages of succession. • For each of the 5 stages outline how the following change: • Size and diversity of organisms • Complexity of energy flows • Soil • NPP and GPP (explain why they change) • Productivity : respiration ratio Oldest Youngest
Summary of Key Points • Succession is the change in species composition in an ecosystem over time. • It may occur on bare ground (primary succession) when soil formation starts the process or where soil already formed but the vegetation has been removed (secondary succession). • Early in succession, gross primary productivity (GPP) and respiration are low and so net primary productivity (NPP) is high as biomass accumulates.
Summary of Key Points • In later stages, while GPP may remain high, respiration increases so NPP may approach zero and the productivity :respiration ratio (P:R) approaches one. • A climax community is reached at the end of succession when species composition stops changing. But there may be several states of a climax community, depending on abiotic factors. • The more complex the ecosystem (higher biodiversity, increasing age), the more stable it tends to be.