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Community Ecology

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'a community is not an organism, but a coincidence' Succession a dynamic ... Retrogressive succession: habitat becomes more hydric or xeric, e.g. bog succession ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Ecology


1
Community Ecology
  • What is a community?

2
Community Ecology Outline
  • Community concepts
  • Succession in communities
  • The process
  • Mechanisms and models

3
Historical ideas of the community
Community Concepts
  • Josias Braun-Blanquet (1932)
  • The floristic-sociological approach,
    phytosociology
  • Communities discrete
  • Defined by associations of indicator species
  • accidental taxa removed
  • Concerned with pattern not process

4
Historical ideas of the community
Community Concepts
  • Frederick Clements (1916, 1928)
  • Organismal view, or super-organism concept
  • Communities discrete
  • Species interdependent
  • Emergent properties
  • Climax community determined by climate

5
A Clementsian Community Concept
Community Concepts
6
Historical ideas of the community
Community Concepts
  • Henry Gleason (1917, 1926, 1927)
  • Continuum view, or individualistic concept
  • Communities intergrade
  • Interactions not specific
  • a community is not an organism, but a
    coincidence
  • Succession a dynamic process

7
Tree IVs across a moisture gradient
Community Concepts
Fig 9.1
8
Tree frequency along an altitudinal gradient
Community Concepts
Fig 9.2
9
Modern Community Concept
Community Concepts
  • Mostly Gleasonian, with a few Clementsian touches
  • Pattern Communities are somewhat recognizable
    entities, but they intergrade
  • Process? How do communities assemble?

10
Biogeoclimatic zones as communities
Community Concepts
  • Krajina was a student of the European school
  • Used the relevé method, which is subjective
    placement of plots into discrete community
    associations
  • Our zones reflect the European view that
    communities are discrete, and are more focussed
    on pattern than process

11
Succession
Succession the process
  • Directional change in community composition or
    structure over time
  • Non-seasonal, continuous pattern of local
    colonization and extinction by different plant
    populations

12
Definitions
Succession the process
  • Sere unit of succession
  • Seral stage distinct community within sere
  • Pioneer community initial seral stage
  • Climax community final seral stage
  • Climax dynamic equilibrium, stable species
    composition
  • Old growth complex forest, beyond climax

13
Primary succession
Succession the process
  • Succession on land not previously influenced by a
    community because soil must form, estimated to
    take 1000-5000 yr
  • Classic example glacial retreat in Glacier Bay,
    Alaska
  • Retreat documented since 1760, since 1900 retreat
    is gt 30 km

14
Primary succession at Glacier Bay, AK
Succession the process
Means with the same letter are not significantly
different
15
Glacier bay succession considered fast
Succession the process
  • Sandstone, limestone, weather quickly
  • Constant presence of N fixers

16
Secondary succession
Succession the process
  • Succession in an area where vegetation has been
    removed, but soil, propagules, etc. remain e.g.
    after cultivation, fire, storm
  • Expected to take 100-200 yr
  • Extensively studied in eastern, central US, less
    so here

17
Old field succession in New Jersey
Succession the process
18
Secondary succession in the CWH
Succession the process
  • A typical sequence of species after logging or
    other disturbance
  • Fireweed
  • shrubs (esp. Rubus)
  • Alder
  • bigleaf maple, Douglas fir
  • cedar and hemlock are climax

19
Succession at Mt. St. Helens
Succession the process
  • Many biological legacies allowed rapid
    recolonizationsimilar to secondary succession
    despite lava flows
  • One of the first colonists lupine. N-fixing,
    self pollinating, abiotic dispersal

20
Succession the process
Bare Lupine
Soil Nitrogen
mg/kg soil
J. Halvorsen, J. Bishop, et al.
21
Succession in the Douglas Fir-Western Hemlock
Sere
Succession the process
  • A recent review Franklin et al. 2002. Forest
    Ecology Management 155399-423
  • Structural attributes of forest stands important,
    especially legacies after disturbance

22
Succession the process
23
Summary of changes during forest succession
Succession the process
  • Establishment/initiation
  • Competitive exclusion
  • Maturation/diversification
  • Dynamic climax

24
Changes over progressive succession
Succession the process
25
Other types of Seres
Succession the process
  • Retrogressive succession habitat becomes more
    hydric or xeric, e.g. bog succession
  • Cyclical succession, e.g. shrub communities

26
Cyclical succession
Succession the process
27
Summary Succession processes
  • Distinction between primary and secondary
    succession can be unclear, but there are
    differences between processes occurring that
    appear repeatable
  • General changes during succession can be
    described, although there is some debate about
    their timing
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