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Plant Succession

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photo by John Donohue 1995 or 1996. Stages of Succession ... Relative Shade Tolerance of Some North American Species. Very tolerant. western redcedar ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Plant Succession


1
Plant Succession
  • Lauren Fins, Ph.D
  • Professor of Forestry
  • University of Idaho

Photo Willamette National Forest Old Growth
americanlands.org
2
Plant Succession
  • Definition
  • Stages
  • Tolerance

3
Plant Succession - Definition
  • The orderly process of one plant community
    gradually or rapidly replacing another
  • Can result from the developmental changes in the
    ecosystem itself
  • Or from disturbances such as wind, fire, volcanic
    activity, insects and disease or harvesting
  • In a particular environment, there is a
    characteristic sequence of biotic communities
    that successively occupy and replace each other
    over time following disturbance

4
Plant Succession
  • Assumptions
  • no change in regional climate
  • no catastrophic events
  • long time frame (hundreds of years)
  • Some stages of the characteristic sequence may be
    skipped
  • Disturbance moves the community to a different,
    usually earlier, successional stage.

5
Stages of Succession
  • Primary succession
  • Initiated by disturbances that expose substrates
    and are left with essentially no plant growth at
    the beginning
  • Examples glacial retreat volcanic ash
    deposition

Mt. St. HelensMay 18, 1980
Gilkey Glacier, Alaska from www.geophot.de
  • Secondary succession
  • Established plant community has been destroyed
    but without severe disturbance of the soil
  • Example forest succession following wildfire -
    pioneer forest re-establishes and is eventually
    replaced with climax forest

wildfirefrom www.us.gov
6
Plant Succession
  • Seral stages
  • Climax stage

7
Stages of Succession
  • Seral communities The various temporary
    communities in the succession
  • Seral species - those that will ultimately be
    replaced
  • examples annual plants, shrubs, intolerant trees

eastern white pine invading old fieldHarvard
Forest diorama slide collection
shrub species at Mt. St. Helensphoto by John
Donohue 1995 or 1996
8
Stages of Succession
  • Climax community The final stage of the
    succession - consists of those plants that can
    reproduce successfully beneath their own shade
    and therefore maintain the community indefinitely
    under the prevailing conditions
  • Climax species Those species that will occupy
    the site at the climax stage of succession
  • Examples tolerant tree species such as cedar
    and hemlock

eastern white pine replaced by eastern
hemlockHarvard Forest diorama slide collection
9
Why do some species replace others in the
successional progression?
10
Shade Tolerance
  • Refers to the ability of a tree to grow in the
    shade of other trees
  • Tolerant species (T) can grow comparatively well
    when little light is available and do not show
    large increases in growth with increasing light
    levels. Climax species
  • Intolerant species (I) cannot grow well in low
    light levels but grow very well at light levels
    approaching full sunlight. Pioneer species
  • Some species are intermediate (N) in their
    ability to grow in shade

a before disturbance b immediately after
disturbance (5 years) c midpoint of succession
(50-75 years) d full recovery and return to
pre-disturbance conditions
11
Relative Shade Tolerance of Some North American
Species
  • Very intolerant
  • western larch
  • subalpine larch
  • whitebark pine

Whitebark pine Oregonwww.orst.edu/instruc/for24
1
Western larch in mixed conifer stand
Photo - http//forestry.about.com
12
Relative Shade Tolerance of Some North American
Species
  • Intolerant
  • lodgepole pine
  • ponderosa pine
  • juniper species

ponderosa pine - Oregonwww.orst.edu/instruc/for24
1
lodgepole pine Oregonwww.orst.edu/instruc/for24
1
13
Relative Shade Tolerance of Some North American
Species
  • Intermediate
  • Douglas-fir
  • western white pine
  • giant sequoia

western white pine
Douglas-fir Oregonwww.orst.edu/instruc/for241
14
Relative Shade Tolerance of Some North American
Species
  • Tolerant
  • grand fir
  • subalpine fir
  • Engelmann spruce

grand fir needles www.geocities.com
15
Relative Shade Tolerance of Some North American
Species
  • Very tolerant
  • western redcedar
  • western hemlock
  • Pacific yew

Western redcedar at Ross Creek, Montana Photo by
John R. Pierce
western redcedar, western hemlock and others at
Ross Creek, MTphoto by John R. Pierce
16
Classic Forest Succession
  • Grass-forb
  • Forbs, grasses and shrubs dominate the site
  • Shrub-seedling
  • Trees tend to share and then begin to dominate
    the site. The shade intolerant species grow
    rapidly and dominate over shade tolerant species
  • Sapling-pole
  • Trees eventually overtop and out-compete the
    forb and shrubs. The intolerant trees continue
    rapid height growth while the shade-tolerant
    trees occupy their respective niche

17
Classic Forest Succession
  • Young
  • Growth is still rapid. Tree-to-tree competition
    may be severe resulting in competition-caused
    mortality. Any intolerant individuals that drop
    behind may die and their growing space may be
    occupied by the tolerant trees.
  • Mature
  • Competition-caused mortality continues. Both
    intolerant and tolerant trees may share the main
    canopy. In mixed conifer stands, there may be
    distinct layering of intolerants and tolerants.

18
Classic Forest Succession
  • Climax
  • Shade-tolerant trees dominate the site and the
    climax species will reproduce.
  • Shade-intolerant trees cannot replace themselves.
  • Most climax stands (old growth) are set back to
    the early seral grass-forb or shrub-seedling
    stage by fire in the Northern Rockies.

19
Buell-Small Successional StudyHutcheson Memorial
Forest Somerset County, New Jersey
First year field dominated by annuals
Fifth year field dominated by goldenrod
Year 10 field dominated by goldenrod, asters,
yarrow, daisies eastern redcedar invading
Year 28 red maple dominates
Year 20 dogwood, oaks and maples invading along
with redcedar
Photos from www.ecostudies.org
20
Forest Succession - Summary
  • Plant communities continually change
  • The community is a continuum in time and space
  • New species invade the site
  • Existing species continue to reproduce or they
    eventually disappear
  • Succession results in a rich dynamic tapestry of
    vegetation, providing an array of habitats for
    animals and microbes. (Perry 1994)

21
Distribution of forest species along
environmental gradients in eastern
Washington/northern Idaho
(whitebark pine)
(mountain hemlock)
(subalpine fir)
(Engelmann spruce)
(western hemlock)
(western redcedar)
22
Forest Classification
  • Cover type refers to species that are currently
    present on the site
  • Habitat types indicate the potential climax
    vegetation on a site if left undisturbed
  • Habitat types are named for the climax tree
    species and an understory indicator species -
    example Pinus ponderosa/Physocarpus malvaceus
    (ponderosa pine/ninebark)

23
Comparison of the distributions of habitat series
in northern Idaho
24
Misconceptions about Habitat Types
  • An abundance of climax vegetation is present in
    the current landscape
  • We should manage the resource to promote climax
    vegetation
  • To apply the habitat type classification system
    requires climax vegetation to be present
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