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Ecological Succession

A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

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Page 1: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Ecological Succession

Page 2: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago.

Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building.

Examples of Changing Ecosystems

Page 3: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Gradual process of change and replacement of the types of species in a community.

May take hundreds or thousands of years.

Ecological Succession

Page 4: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Newer communities make it harder for the older ones to survive.

Example: Younger birch trees will have a harder time competing with taller, older birch trees for sun, but a shade loving tree may replace the smaller birch trees.

Page 5: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Primary SuccessionType of succession

that occurs where there was no ecosystem before.

Occurs on rocks, cliffs, and sand dunes.

Page 6: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Primary succession is very slow.Begins where there is no soil.Takes several hundred years to produce

fertile soil naturally.First species to colonize bare rock would be

bacteria and lichens.

Page 7: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Do not require soil.Colorful, flaky patches.Composed of two species, a fungi and an

algae.The algae photosynthesize and the fungi

absorbs nutrients from rocks and holds water.Over time, they break down the rock.

Lichens

Page 8: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building
Page 9: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

As the rocks breaks apart, water freezes and thaws on the cracks, which breaks up the rocks further.

When the lichens die, they accumulate in the cracks.

Then mosses begin to grow and die, leading to the creation of fertile soil.

Fertile soil is made up of the broken rocks, decayed organisms, water, and air.

Page 10: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Mosses on rocks

Page 11: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Primary succession can be seen happening on the sidewalks.

If left alone, even NYC would return to a cement filled woodland.

Page 12: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

More commonOccurs on a surface where an ecosystem has

previously existed. Occurs on ecosystems that have been

disturbed or disrupted by humans, animals, or by natural processes such as storms, floods, earthquakes, and volcanoes.

Secondary Succession

Page 13: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Erupted in 1980.44,460 acres were

burned and flattened.

After the eruption, plants began to colonize the volcanic debris.

Pioneer species: the first organism to colonize any newly available area and begin the process of ecological succession.

Secondary Succession: Mt. St. Helens

Page 14: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Over time, the pioneer species makes the area habitable by other species.

Today, Mt. St. Helens in the process of secondary succession.

Plants, flowers, new trees and shrubs have started to grow.

If this continues, over time they will form a climax community.

Page 15: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Climax community: the final and stable community.

Climax community will continue to change in small ways, but left undisturbed, it will remain the same through time.

Page 16: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Natural fire caused by lightening are a necessary part of secondary succession.

Some species of trees (ex: Jack pine) can only release their seeds after they have been exposed to the intense heat of a fire.

Minor forest fires remove brush and deadwood.

Fire and Secondary Succession

Page 17: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Some animals depend on fires because they feed on the newly sprouted vegetation.

Foresters allow natural fires to burn unless they are a threat to human life or property.

Fire and Secondary Succession

Page 18: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building
Page 19: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Old-field SuccessionOccurs in farmland

that has been abandoned.

Grasses and weeds grow quickly, and produce many seeds that cover large areas.

Page 20: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Over time, taller plants grow in the area, shading the light and keeping the pioneer species from receiving any light.

The longer roots of the taller plants deprive the pioneer species from water.

The pioneer species die.

Page 21: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Taller trees begin to grow and deprive the taller plants of water and light.

Followed by slow growing trees (oaks, maples) takeover the area.

After about a century, the land returns to a climax community.

Page 22: A forest could have been a shallow lake a thousand years ago. Mosses, shrubs, and small trees cover the concrete of a demolished building

Create two flowcharts. One illustrating the steps of primary succession, one illustrating the steps of secondary succession.

You may use either pictures or words.Use the following terms in your charts:

Your Turn: HW