Succession Flashcards

1
Q

What is succession?

A

The directional change in the structure of a community over time

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2
Q

What is each sequence of succession called?

A

A sere, or a seral stage

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3
Q

How is succession different from zonation?

A

Succession is in one location, zonation is across the landscape

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4
Q

What is the end stage of succession?

A

The climax community

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5
Q

Are changes during succession random or do they follow a predictable pattern?

A

Both, depends on the community

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6
Q

Who is the guy who came up with the relay floristics mechanism of succession? What is it?

A

Clements

Succession proceeds by predictable changes, inhibition, facilitation, and tolerance “pathways”

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7
Q

What is the facilitation “pathway” in relay floristics?

A

Early species facilitate the arrival of late species. Resident species don’t change the environment in any way that favours other species

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8
Q

What is the tolerance “pathway” in relay floristics?

A

Environment is unsuitable for early species, but neither favourable or unfavourable for late species. Resident species are the ones able to tolerate the conditions

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9
Q

What is the inhibition “pathway” in relay floristics?

A

Environment is less suitable for establishment by all species. Resident species inhibit the establishment of all other species

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10
Q

Who is the guy who came up with the initial floristics mechanism of succession? What is it?

A

Egler

What matters is who gets there first, if its pioneer species or species that survived the disturbance that reestablish

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11
Q

Who is the guy who came up with the idea that all successional changes are random?

A

Gleason

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12
Q

What are the 3 successional stages?

A

Early, mid, late

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13
Q

What species are in the early successional stages?

A

The pioneer community. Species with high growth rates, high dispersal, small size, potential for high population growth, r species

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14
Q

What species are in the late successional stages?

A

Species that are better at competition, lower dispersal, lower colonization, slower growth, longer lived, K species

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15
Q

What is primary succession?

A

Occurs on newly exposed substrates with no previous plant communities

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16
Q

What are the steps of primary succession? How long does it take?

A
  1. Rock weathering
  2. Soil formation from lichens and mosses that die, leave behind organic matter
  3. Successional stages
    Hundreds of years
17
Q

When does primary succession occur?

A

When no soil is initially present. Glacial retreat, volcanic rocks, sand dunes, etc

18
Q

What is secondary succession?

A

Occurs on previously vegetated surfaces, with the first pioneer species already there

19
Q

When does secondary succession occur?

A

After a disturbance, when soil is already present

20
Q

What is the difference between primary and secondary succession?

A

The initial presence of soil

21
Q

How do climax communities and pioneer communities differ in terms of seed dispersal?

A

Pioneer communities have wind dispersal, climax communities have animal dispersal

22
Q

What are autogenic environmental changes?

A

Results from species within a community

23
Q

What are allogenic environmental changes?

A

Results from physical environment

24
Q

What drives succession in a terrestrial environment?

A

Species colonization and replacement

25
Q

How can speed of replacement be decreased during succession?

A

Slow competition, disturbances (fire, insect outbreaks, human activity

26
Q

What drives succession in aquatic systems? Where does it tend to happen?

A

Sedimentation and eutrophication. Common in eutrophic lakes

27
Q

What are the successional stages in aquatic systems?

A

Shallow lake -> marsh -> bog/fen -> terrestrial environment

28
Q

How can succession be reversed?

A

Disturbances will set back succession to earlier stages, and knock back the abundance of dominant species, creating stability

29
Q

How can stability be created (2 ways)? What determines those?

A

Resistance: maintaining structure/function in face of a potential disturbance
Resilience: how fast a community comes back after a disturbance
Both are determined by biodiversity