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Ecological Succession… Ecological Succession… By Jaya prakash.M Thejasvi.R Dinesh.R SRI KRISHNA COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

Ecological succession

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Page 1: Ecological succession

Ecological Succession…Ecological Succession…

By

Jaya prakash.M

Thejasvi.R

Dinesh.R

SRI KRISHNA COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

Page 2: Ecological succession

Ecological Succession is…

• The observed process of change in the species structure of an ecological community over time.

• Succession occurs in all natural environments. Each environment has a particular name that expresses the nature of their ecological succession: Primary and Secondary

Intro.flv

Page 3: Ecological succession

1st year Horseweed dominant; crabgrass, pigweed

2nd year Asters

dominant; crabgrass

3rd to 18th year

Grass scrub community; broomsedge grass, pines

coming in during this

stage

19th to 30th year

Young pine forest

30th to 70th year

Mature pine forest;

Understory of young

hardwoods

70th to 100th year

Pine to hardwood transition

100th year plus

Climax oak-hickory forest

Ecological Succession

Page 4: Ecological succession

There are two main types of Ecological Succession

• Primary Succession: The process of creating life in an area where no life previously existed.

• Secondary Succession: The process of re-stabilization that follows a disturbance in an area where life has formed an ecosystem.

Page 5: Ecological succession

Examples of Succession

Primary Secondary

Primary Succession.flv Secondary Succession, Forest Fire (polozov 202).mpg

Page 6: Ecological succession

Primary Succession• The development of an

ecosystem in an area that has never had a community living within it occurs by a process called PRIMARY SUCCESSION.

• An example of an area in which a community has never lived before, would be a new lava or rock from a volcano that makes a new island.

Page 7: Ecological succession

Primary Succession

Page 8: Ecological succession

Secondary Succession• SECONDARY SUCCESSION begins in habitats where

communities were entirely or partially destroyed by some kind of damaging event.

• When an existing community has been cleared by a disturbance such as a fire, tornado, etc...and the soil remains intact, the area begins to return to its natural community. Because these habitats previously supported life, secondary succession, unlike primary succession, begins on substrates that already bear soil. In addition, the soil contains a native seed bank.

Page 9: Ecological succession

The Circle of Life in Secondary Succession

Page 10: Ecological succession

Why Does Ecological Succession Occur?

• Because it is the process of life for plants, soil and other living organisms.

• Because organisms alter soil structure,

chemistry, and microclimates, the species composition of ecological communities constantly changes over time.

• Succession will continue until the environment reaches it’s final stage…the Climax Community.

Page 11: Ecological succession

The Climax Community

• A climax community is a mature, stable community that is the final stage of ecological succession. In an ecosystem with a climax community, the conditions continue to be suitable for all the members of the community.

• Any particular region has its own set of climax species, which are the plants that are best adapted for the area and will persist after succession has finished, until another disturbance clears the area.

Page 12: Ecological succession

These are Climax Communities

Ecological Succession of the Climax Forest.mpg

Page 13: Ecological succession

• Two main physical factors determine the nature of the community that develops in an area. These are temperature and the amount of rainfall. And other relative factors.

• If we place the amount of rainfall on a graph’s “x” axis, from 0-10, 10-20,and 20-30+ inches and the temperature along the “y” axis from hot, moderate, to cold, the various types of ecosystems will fit into the graph based on the conditions that they require.

Temperature

Cold Cold desert Tundra Taiga

Moderate Temperate forest Grassland Deciduous forest

Hot Hot desert Savanna Tropical forest

Rainfall (inches) 0-10 10-20 20-30+

Page 14: Ecological succession

• Pioneer species colonize a bare or disturbed site. Soil building. • Changes in the physical environment occur (e.g., light,

moisture).

• New species of plants displace existing plants because their seedlings are better able to become established in the changed environment.

• Newly arriving species alter the physical conditions, often in

ways that enable other species to become established. • SURVIVAL • Eventually a climax community that is more or less stable will

become established and have the ability to reproduce itself. • Disturbances will start the process of succession again.

A summary of changes that occur during succession:

Page 15: Ecological succession

Threats to Succession

• The grasses that move in as pioneer species are often thought of as weeds.

• The subsequent growth of shrubs are considered undesirable "brush".

Page 16: Ecological succession

• Without these intermediate stages, the disturbed habitat can't return to a natural forest.

• The fragility and stability of the ecological community are dependent upon several factors.

Page 17: Ecological succession

How Do Humans Affect Ecological Succession?

• Clearing the land for the garden and preparing the soil for planting represents a major external event that radically re-structures and disrupts a previously stabilized ecosystem. The disturbed ecosystem will immediately begin a process of ecological succession.

• Plant species that adapt to the sunny conditions and the broken soil will rapidly invade the site and will become quickly and densely established. These invading plants are what we call "weeds“ in which we consider a nuisance or invaders.

Page 18: Ecological succession

• A gardener's only course of action is to spend a great deal of time and energy weeding the garden or using chemicals to infringe upon the weeds and the ecosystem around it.

• The farmers and gardeners who are growing our

foods incur an immense cost in terms of time, fuel, herbicides and pesticides that humans pay every growing season because of the force of ecological succession.

Page 19: Ecological succession

Does Ecological Succession Ever Stop?

• We must recognize that any ecosystem, no matter how inherently stable and persistent, could be subject to massive external disruptive forces (like fires and storms) that could re-set and re-trigger the success ional process.

• As long as these random and potentially catastrophic events are possible, it is not absolutely accurate to say that succession has stopped.

Page 20: Ecological succession

ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION NEVER ENDS

• Also, over long periods of time (“geological time”) the climate conditions and other fundamental aspects of an ecosystem change.

• These geological time scale changes are not observable in our “ ecological” time, but their fundamental existence and historical reality cannot be disputed.

• No ecosystem, then, has existed or will exist unchanged or unchanging over a geological time scale.

Page 21: Ecological succession

ENDLESS ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION…

OUR ENDLESS PRESENTATION FOR A GOOD CAUSE

WISHING…

Page 22: Ecological succession