Ecological succession is the process of change in the species structure of an ecological community over time. The time scale can be decades (for example, after a wildfire), or even millions of years after a mass extinction.
The community begins with relatively few pioneering plants and animals and develops through increasing complexity until it becomes stable or self-perpetuating as a climax community.
The "engine" of succession, the cause of ecosystem change, is the
impact of established species upon their own environments. A consequence
of living is the sometimes subtle and sometimes overt alteration of
one's own environment.
It is a phenomenon or process by which an ecological community undergoes more or less orderly and predictable changes following a disturbance
or the initial colonization of a new habitat. Succession may be
initiated either by formation of new, unoccupied habitat, such as from a
lava flow or a severe landslide, or by some form of disturbance of a community, such as from a fire, severe windthrow, or logging. Succession that begins in new habitats, uninfluenced by pre-existing communities is called primary succession, whereas succession that follows disruption of a pre-existing community is called secondary succession.
Succession was among the first theories advanced in ecology. Ecological succession was first documented in the Indiana Dunes of Northwest Indiana and remains at the core of ecological science.
Examples of Ecological Succession
Acadia National Park
In the 1900's Acadia National Park was apart of a wildfire that destroyed much of the landscape. This is a part of secondary succession.
In secondary succession the soils and organisms need to be left
unharmed so there is a way for the new material to be built back up. In
the example at Acadia, the forest wasn't petty and took a year at the
least to grow shrubs and small organisms. Eventually trees started to
naturally come back an grow. Originally it was evergreen trees growing
in the landscape, but after the fire deciduous trees were sprouting
here.
History
Precursors of the idea of ecological succession go back to the beginning of the 19th century. The French naturalist Adolphe Dureau de la Malle was the first to make use of the word succession concerning the vegetation development after forest clear-cutting. In 1859 Henry David Thoreau wrote an address called "The Succession of Forest Trees"
in which he described succession in an oak-pine forest. "It has long
been known to observers that squirrels bury nuts in the ground, but I am
not aware that any one has thus accounted for the regular succession of
forests." The Austrian botanist Anton Kerner published a study about the succession of plants in the Danube river basin in 1863.
H. C. Cowles
Henry Chandler Cowles, at the University of Chicago, developed a more formal concept of succession. Inspired by studies of Danish dunes by Eugen Warming, Cowles studied vegetation development on sand dunes on the shores of Lake Michigan (the Indiana Dunes).
He recognized that vegetation on dunes of different ages might be
interpreted as different stages of a general trend of vegetation
development on dunes (an approach to the study of vegetation change
later termed space-for-time substitution, or chronosequence studies). He first published this work as a paper in the Botanical Gazette
in 1899 ("The ecological relations of the vegetation of the sand dunes
of Lake Michigan"). In this classic publication and subsequent papers,
he formulated the idea of primary succession and the notion of a sere—a repeatable sequence of community changes specific to particular environmental circumstances.
Gleason and Clements
From about 1900 to 1960, however, understanding of succession was dominated by the theories of Frederic Clements,
a contemporary of Cowles, who held that seres were highly predictable
and deterministic and converged on a climatically determined stable climax community
regardless of starting conditions. Clements explicitly analogized the
successional development of ecological communities with ontogenetic
development of individual organisms, and his model is often referred to
as the pseudo-organismic theory of community ecology. Clements and his
followers developed a complex taxonomy of communities and successional
pathways.
Henry Gleason
offered a contrasting framework as early as the 1920s. The Gleasonian
model was more complex and much less deterministic than the Clementsian.
It differs most fundamentally from the Clementsian view in suggesting a
much greater role of chance factors
and in denying the existence of coherent, sharply bounded community
types. Gleason argued that species distributions responded
individualistically to environmental factors, and communities were best
regarded as artifacts of the juxtaposition of species distributions.
Gleason's ideas, first published in 1926, were largely ignored until the
late 1950s.
Two quotes illustrate the contrasting views of Clements and Gleason. Clements wrote in 1916:
The developmental study of vegetation necessarily rests upon the assumption that the unit or climax formation is an organic entity. As an organism the formation arises, grows, matures, and dies. Furthermore, each climax formation is able to reproduce itself, repeating with essential fidelity the stages of its development.
— Frederic Clements
while Gleason, in his 1926 paper, said:
An association is not an organism, scarcely even a vegetational unit, but merely a coincidence.
— Henry Gleason
Gleason's ideas were, in fact, more consistent with Cowles' original
thinking about succession. About Clements' distinction between primary succession and secondary succession, Cowles wrote (1911):
This classification seems not to be of fundamental value, since it separates such closely related phenomena as those of erosion and deposition, and it places together such unlike things as human agencies and the subsidence of land.
— Henry Cowles
Modern era
A more rigorous, data-driven testing of successional models and community theory generally began with the work of Robert Whittaker and John Curtis in the 1950s and 1960s. Succession theory has since become less monolithic and more complex. J. Connell and R. Slatyer
attempted a codification of successional processes by mechanism. Among
British and North American ecologists, the notion of a stable climax vegetation
has been largely abandoned, and successional processes have come to be
seen as much less deterministic, with important roles for historical contingency
and for alternate pathways in the actual development of communities.
Debates continue as to the general predictability of successional
dynamics and the relative importance of equilibrial vs. non-equilibrial
processes. Former Harvard professor F. A. Bazzaz introduced the notion
of scale into the discussion, as he considered that at local or
small area scale the processes are stochastic and patchy, but taking
bigger regional areas into consideration, certain tendencies can not be
denied.
Factors
The
trajectory of successional change can be influenced by site conditions,
by the character of the events initiating succession (perturbations), by
the interactions of the species present, and by more stochastic factors such as availability of colonists or seeds or weather
conditions at the time of disturbance. Some of these factors contribute
to predictability of succession dynamics; others add more probabilistic elements. Two important perturbation factors today are human actions and climatic change.
In general, communities in early succession will be dominated by fast-growing, well-dispersed species (opportunist, fugitive, or r-selected life-histories). As succession proceeds, these species will tend to be replaced by more competitive (k-selected) species.
Trends in ecosystem and community properties in succession have been suggested, but few appear to be general. For example, species diversity
almost necessarily increases during early succession as new species
arrive, but may decline in later succession as competition eliminates
opportunistic species and leads to dominance by locally superior competitors. Net Primary Productivity, biomass, and trophic properties all show variable patterns over succession, depending on the particular system and site.
Ecological succession was formerly seen as having a stable end-stage called the climax,
sometimes referred to as the 'potential vegetation' of a site, and
shaped primarily by the local climate. This idea has been largely
abandoned by modern ecologists in favor of nonequilibrium ideas of
ecosystems dynamics. Most natural ecosystems experience disturbance at a
rate that makes a "climax" community unattainable. Climate change
often occurs at a rate and frequency sufficient to prevent arrival at a
climax state. Additions to available species pools through range
expansions and introductions can also continually reshape communities.
The development of some ecosystem attributes, such as soil properties and nutrient cycles,
are both influenced by community properties, and, in turn, influence
further successional development. This feed-back process may occur only
over centuries or millennia. Coupled with the stochastic
nature of disturbance events and other long-term (e.g., climatic)
changes, such dynamics make it doubtful whether the 'climax' concept
ever applies or is particularly useful in considering actual vegetation.
Types
Primary, secondary and cyclic succession
Successional dynamics beginning with colonization of an area that has
not been previously occupied by an ecological community, such as newly
exposed rock or sand surfaces, lava flows, newly exposed glacial tills,
etc., are referred to as primary succession. The stages of primary
succession include pioneer microorganisms,
plants (lichens and mosses), grassy stage, smaller shrubs, and trees.
Animals begin to return when there is food there for them to eat. When
it is a fully functioning ecosystem, it has reached the climax community
stage. For example, parts of Acadia National Park in Maine went through primary succession.
Successional dynamics following severe disturbance or removal of a
pre-existing community are called secondary succession. Dynamics in
secondary succession are strongly influenced by pre-disturbance
conditions, including soil development, seed banks, remaining organic
matter, and residual living organisms. Because of residual fertility and
pre-existing organisms, community change in early stages of secondary
succession can be relatively rapid. In a fragmented old field habitat
created in eastern Kansas, woody plants "colonized more rapidly (per
unit area) on large and nearby patches".
Secondary succession is much more commonly observed and studied
than primary succession. Particularly common types of secondary
succession include responses to natural disturbances such as fire,
flood, and severe winds, and to human-caused disturbances such as
logging and agriculture. As an example, secondary succession has been
occurring in Shenandoah National Park following the 1995 flood of the
Mormon River, which destroyed plant and animal life. Today, plant and
animal species are beginning to return.
Seasonal and cyclic dynamics
Unlike secondary succession, these types of vegetation change are not dependent on disturbance but are periodic changes arising from fluctuating species interactions or recurring events. These models modify the climax concept towards one of dynamic states.
Causes of plant succession
Autogenic succession
can be brought by changes in the soil caused by the organisms there.
These changes include accumulation of organic matter in litter or humic
layer, alteration of soil nutrients, or change in the pH of soil due to
the plants growing there. The structure of the plants themselves can
also alter the community. For example, when larger species like trees
mature, they produce shade on to the developing forest floor that tends
to exclude light-requiring species. Shade-tolerant species will invade
the area.
Allogenic succession
is caused by external environmental influences and not by the
vegetation. For example, soil changes due to erosion, leaching or the
deposition of silt and clays can alter the nutrient content and water
relationships in the ecosystems. Animals also play an important role in
allogenic changes as they are pollinators, seed dispersers and
herbivores. They can also increase nutrient content of the soil in
certain areas, or shift soil about (as termites, ants, and moles do)
creating patches in the habitat. This may create regeneration sites that
favor certain species.
Climatic factors may be very important, but on a much longer
time-scale than any other. Changes in temperature and rainfall patterns
will promote changes in communities. As the climate warmed at the end of
each ice age, great successional changes took place. The tundra
vegetation and bare glacial till deposits underwent succession to mixed
deciduous forest. The greenhouse effect resulting in increase in
temperature is likely to bring profound Allogenic changes in the next
century. Geological and climatic catastrophes such as volcanic
eruptions, earthquakes, avalanches, meteors, floods, fires, and high
wind also bring allogenic changes.
Mechanisms
In 1916, Frederic Clements published a descriptive theory of succession and advanced it as a general ecological concept. His theory of succession had a powerful influence on ecological thought. Clements' concept is usually termed classical ecological theory.
According to Clements, succession is a process involving several phases:
- Nudation: Succession begins with the development of a bare site, called Nudation (disturbance).
- Migration: It refers to arrival of propagules.
- Ecesis: It involves establishment and initial growth of vegetation.
- Competition: As vegetation becomes well established, grow, and spread, various species begin to compete for space, light and nutrients.
- Reaction: During this phase autogenic changes such as the buildup of humus affect the habitat, and one plant community replaces another.
- Stabilization: A supposedly stable climax community forms.
Seral communities
A seral community is an intermediate stage found in an ecosystem advancing towards its climax community. In many cases more than one seral stage evolves until climax conditions are attained. A prisere
is a collection of seres making up the development of an area from
non-vegetated surfaces to a climax community. Depending on the
substratum and climate, different seres are found.
Changes in animal life
Succession theory was developed primarily by botanists. The study of succession applied to whole ecosystems initiated in the writings of Ramon Margalef, while Eugene Odum’s publication of The Strategy of Ecosystem Development is considered its formal starting point.
Animal life also exhibit changes with changing communities. In
lichen stage the fauna is sparse. It comprises few mites, ants and
spiders living in the cracks and crevices. The fauna undergoes a
qualitative increase during herb grass stage. The animals found during
this stage include nematodes, insects larvae, ants, spiders, mites, etc.
The animal population increases and diversifies with the development of
forest climax community. The fauna consists of invertebrates like
slugs, snails, worms, millipedes, centipedes, ants, bugs; and
vertebrates such as squirrels, foxes, mice, moles, snakes, various
birds, salamanders and frogs.
Microsuccession
Succession of micro-organisms including fungi and bacteria
occurring within a microhabitat is known as microsuccession or serule.
Like in plants, microbial succession can occur in newly available
habitats (primary succession) such as surfaces of plant leaves, recently exposed rock surfaces (i.e., glacial till) or animal infant guts , and also on disturbed communities (secondary succession)
like those growing in recently dead trees or animal droppings.
Microbial communities may also change due to products secreted by the
bacteria present. Changes of pH in a habitat could provide ideal
conditions for a new species to inhabit the area. In some cases the new
species may outcompete the present ones for nutrients leading to the
primary species demise. Changes can also occur by microbial succession
with variations in water availability and temperature. Theories of macroecology have only recently been applied to microbiology
and so much remains to be understood about this growing field. A recent
study of microbial succession evaluated the balances between stochastic and deterministic processes in the bacterial colonization of a salt marsh chronosequence. The results of this study show that, much like in macro succession, early colonization (primary succession)
is mostly influenced by stochasticity while secondary succession of
these bacterial communities was more strongly influenced by
deterministic factors.
Climax concept
According to classical ecological theory,
succession stops when the sere has arrived at an equilibrium or steady
state with the physical and biotic environment. Barring major
disturbances, it will persist indefinitely. This end point of succession
is called climax.
Climax community
The final or stable community in a sere is the climax community or climatic vegetation.
It is self-perpetuating and in equilibrium with the physical habitat.
There is no net annual accumulation of organic matter in a climax
community. The annual production and use of energy is balanced in such a
community.
Characteristics
- The vegetation is tolerant of environmental conditions.
- It has a wide diversity of species, a well-drained spatial structure, and complex food chains.
- The climax ecosystem is balanced. There is equilibrium between gross primary production and total respiration, between energy used from sunlight and energy released by decomposition, between uptake of nutrients from the soil and the return of nutrient by litter fall to the soil.
- Individuals in the climax stage are replaced by others of the same kind. Thus the species composition maintains equilibrium.
- It is an index of the climate of the area. The life or growth forms indicate the climatic type.
Types of climax
- Climatic Climax
- If there is only a single climax and the development of climax community is controlled by the climate of the region, it is termed as climatic climax. For example, development of Maple-beech climax community over moist soil. Climatic climax is theoretical and develops where physical conditions of the substrate are not so extreme as to modify the effects of the prevailing regional climate.
- Edaphic Climax
- When there are more than one climax communities in the region, modified by local conditions of the substrate such as soil moisture, soil nutrients, topography, slope exposure, fire, and animal activity, it is called edaphic climax. Succession ends in an edaphic climax where topography, soil, water, fire, or other disturbances are such that a climatic climax cannot develop.
- Catastrophic Climax
- Climax vegetation vulnerable to a catastrophic event such as a wildfire. For example, in California, chaparral vegetation is the final vegetation. The wildfire removes the mature vegetation and decomposers. A rapid development of herbaceous vegetation follows until the shrub dominance is re-established. This is known as catastrophic climax.
- Disclimax
- When a stable community, which is not the climatic or edaphic climax for the given site, is maintained by man or his domestic animals, it is designated as Disclimax (disturbance climax) or anthropogenic subclimax (man-generated). For example, overgrazing by stock may produce a desert community of bushes and cacti where the local climate actually would allow grassland to maintain itself.
- Subclimax
- The prolonged stage in succession just preceding the climatic climax is subclimax.
- Preclimax and Postclimax
- In certain areas different climax communities develop under similar climatic conditions. If the community has life forms lower than those in the expected climatic climax, it is called preclimax; a community that has life forms higher than those in the expected climatic climax is postclimax. Preclimax strips develop in less moist and hotter areas, whereas Postclimax strands develop in more moist and cooler areas than that of surrounding climate.
Theories
There are three schools of interpretations explaining the climax concept:
- Monoclimax or Climatic Climax Theory was advanced by Clements (1916) and recognizes only one climax whose characteristics are determined solely by climate (climatic climax). The processes of succession and modification of environment overcome the effects of differences in topography, parent material of the soil, and other factors. The whole area would be covered with uniform plant community. Communities other than the climax are related to it, and are recognized as subclimax, postclimax and disclimax.
- Polyclimax Theory was advanced by Tansley (1935). It proposes that the climax vegetation of a region consists of more than one vegetation climaxes controlled by soil moisture, soil nutrients, topography, slope exposure, fire, and animal activity.
- Climax Pattern Theory was proposed by Whittaker (1953). The climax pattern theory recognizes a variety of climaxes governed by responses of species populations to biotic and abiotic conditions. According to this theory the total environment of the ecosystem determines the composition, species structure, and balance of a climax community. The environment includes the species responses to moisture, temperature, and nutrients, their biotic relationships, availability of flora and fauna to colonize the area, chance dispersal of seeds and animals, soils, climate, and disturbance such as fire and wind. The nature of climax vegetation will change as the environment changes. The climax community represents a pattern of populations that corresponds to and changes with the pattern of environment. The central and most widespread community is the climatic climax.
The theory of alternative stable states suggests there is not one end point but many which transition between each other over ecological time.
Forest succession
The forests, being an ecological system, are subject to the species succession process.
There are "opportunistic" or "pioneer" species that produce great
quantities of seed that are disseminated by the wind, and therefore can
colonize big empty extensions. They are capable of germinating and
growing in direct sunlight. Once they have produced a closed canopy,
the lack of direct sun radiation at soil makes it difficult for their
own seedlings to develop. It is then the opportunity for shade-tolerant
species to become established under the protection of the pioneers.
When the pioneers die, the shade-tolerant species replace them. These
species are capable of growing beneath the canopy, and therefore, in the
absence of catastrophes, will stay. For this reason it is then said the
stand
has reached its climax. When a catastrophe occurs, the opportunity for
the pioneers opens up again, provided they are present or within a
reasonable range.
An example of pioneer species, in forests of northeastern North America are Betula papyrifera (White birch) and Prunus serotina (Black cherry),
that are particularly well-adapted to exploit large gaps in forest
canopies, but are intolerant of shade and are eventually replaced by
other shade-tolerant species in the absence of disturbances that create such gaps.
Things in nature are not black and white, and there are
intermediate stages. It is therefore normal that between the two
extremes of light and shade there is a gradient, and there are species
that may act as pioneer or tolerant, depending on the circumstances. It
is of paramount importance to know the tolerance of species in order to
practice an effective silviculture.