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The Plant Community

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Seral Stage - each distinct community type within the sere ... Each seral stage changes the characteristics of the environment making it ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Plant Community


1
The Plant Community
  • The plant community may be described as a working
    mechanism
  • The community itself will largely determine the
    distribution, density, and gregariousness of its
    biotic component parts, whether they function as
    individuals or patches

2
The Plant Community
  • Gleason 1926
  • Each separate community as one minute part of a
    vast and ever changing complex of vegetation
  • A plant association is merely a fortuitous
    mixture of individual plants

3
The Plant Community
  • Clements 1936
  • Saw communities as an association of organisms,
    clearly closely interlinked and interlocked
  • Whittaker 1975
  • Saw the community as a distinctive living system
    with its own composition, structure,
    environmental relations, and development and
    function

4
The Plant Community
  • On a large scale, plant communities show
    extraordinary stability and uniformity and, are
    often considered to be relatively homogenous
    biomes (i.e. forest, grasslands, etc.)

5
The Plant Community
  • On a smaller scale, community variation is
    accentuated
  • Aggregates of individuals and of species form
    dissimilar patches of vegetation
  • These patches then combine to form a mosaic and,
    together, constitute the plant community Watt
    1947

6
SUCCESSION
7
Plant Succession
  • The orderly and progressive replacement of one
    community by another until a relatively stable
    community occupies the area - Smith 1974

8
Succession
  • Primary Succession
  • Occurs where vegetation forms on newly formed
    substrate such as following a volcanic eruption
    or glaciation
  • These areas have no remaining biological
    propagules or organic matter from preceding
    vegetation
  • All colonizing propagules must be dispersed to
    the area

9
Succession
  • Secondary Succession
  • Vegetation reestablishes on remaining soil and is
    based on the previous vegetation
  • Secondary succession begins in habitats damaged
    by fire, floods, insect devastations, grazing,
    and forest clear-cutting and in disturbed areas
    such as abandoned agricultural fields, vacant
    lots, roadsides, and construction sites

10
Sere
  • A unit of succession, from the beginning of the
    temporal sequence to a state of minimal species
    change - Steady State
  • Seral Stage - each distinct community type within
    the sere
  • Initial or Early Seral Stage - Pioneer or
    colonial community

11
Sere
  • A community exhibiting change towards or away
    from the climax is a seral community
  • Final Seral Stage - Climax Community (is this
    ever achieved?)
  • Dynamic Equilibrium

12
Climax Community
  • This is the final seral stage, consisting of a
    predictable equilibrium community that
    perpetuates itself indefinitely without changing
    into another community

13
Mechanisms of Succession
  • Facilitation
  • Each seral stage changes the characteristics of
    the environment making it unsuitable for itself
    (especially for its seedlings) and suitable for
    the members of the next seral stage

14
Perennial Grass
Secondary Sandhills Prairie
Blowoutgrass
Blowoutgrass/ Sand Muhly
Sand Muhly/ Perennial Grass
Disturbance
Native Sandhills Prairie
Bare Sand
Perennial Grass
Annuals
Annual/ Perennial Mixture
Shrubs
15
Mechanisms of Succession
  • Inhibition
  • Species can prevent colonization of another
  • Course of succession is dependent on which
    species arrive first and the next seral stage
    will only occur following the death of those
    individuals and the successful colonization of
    the next set of species

16
Mechanisms of Succession
  • Tolerance
  • Whatever can live there will and the best
    competitor for resources will win
  • Progress of succession dependent upon the
    lifespans of the individuals and the competitive
    abilities of the colonists

17
Succession
  • Progressive Succession
  • Increases in diversity and biomass with the
    habitat becoming more mesic
  • Retrogressive Succession
  • Decreases in diversity and biomass and often
    become more xeric or more hydric

18
Succession and Retrogression is a Continuum
Retrogression
Complex Ecosystems
Bare rock
Simple plants
Weeds
Grasses
Succession
19
Successional Models
20
How is Management Involved?
  • Ranch manger
  • Decides
  • Stocking rate
  • Grazing intensity and frequency
  • Time of grazing
  • Builds
  • Fences
  • Dams
  • Wells
  • Reacts to
  • Drought
  • hail

21
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22
Extremely Powerful!
  • One of a very few Free Lunches
  • Driven by both
  • Random events
  • Fire
  • Drought
  • hail
  • Management
  • Species
  • Stocking rate
  • Risk Management Time Bomb
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