EE19 Flashcards

1
Q

What is succession?

A

a sequence of biological changes in which one group of plant and animal is replaced by another.

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2
Q

What are the 3 hypothesis for driving succession?

A

-Facilitation
-Inhibition
-Idosyncratic (peculiar/odd)
May differ in the importance in primary vs. secondary structures, in one kind of primary vs. another, for different species in the same succession.

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3
Q

What is Facilitation succession?

A
Relay floristics, 
species a paves way for b which paves way for c etc. 
important for primary succesion 
eg. lichens-mosses. 
little evidence in secondary
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4
Q

What is inhibition succession?

A

the opposite of facilitiation.
A stops B establishing.
B can only invade if A suffers a set back.
- seen in sand dune succession

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5
Q

Give an example of a case study of primary succession.

A

Glacial Moraine succesion.

  • galcial moraine in SE alsak
  • clear chronosequence contained in one ecosystem from the retreat of a glacier
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6
Q

Where could primary succession take place?

A
Lava
GlacialRetreats
Sea Bed exposure
Sand dune
rock fall
*No soil, lots of sun, few nutrients, typically poor water holding.
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7
Q

What happens after soil formation in primary succession?

A

nutrient capture, especially N, organic buildup
leads to increased diversity of plant life, increased plant height, good competitors for water and nutrients are replaced by good competitors for light.

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8
Q

What is the typical sequence of primary succession?

A
lichen
moss
grass
shrubs
trees
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9
Q

What is secondary succession?

A
well developed soil already exists. 
tree fall (gap dynamic), fire, land slide etc
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10
Q

What is a seral stage?

A

intermediate stage found in succesion to climax community
often grass land.
prevented from development by fires, grazing etc.

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11
Q

What is Tilmens argument of resource ratios?

A

Good competitors are those that reduce resource supply to the lowest level.

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12
Q

What is the relationship between colonizing and competing abilities?

A

trade off

best competitors are worst colonizers

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13
Q

What is initial floristic competition?

A

species that get there first persist.
fast growing colonists come to dominance eg. grasses.
slower growing species only come to dominance once they have over topped rapid growers.

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14
Q

What is a chronosequence?

A

series of set forested sites that share similar attributes but are different ages

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15
Q

What is the Pidemont Plateu?

A

Fertile agricultural region of the states
rolling terrain and long history of settelmetns
following abandonment agricultural land proceeds to old field and ultimately hardwood forest

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16
Q

What are the two approaches to studying vegetation change?

A

repeated observation of permanent plots over time
observation of different aged plots over time - chronosequence.
*latter easier, former best