Quantifying secondary succession: a method for all sites?
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Community Ecology
- Vol. 4 (2) , 141-156
- https://doi.org/10.1556/comec.4.2003.2.3
Abstract
Quantifying and documenting succession has been a challenge to ecologists for many years. A variety of measures have been generated but do not seem to have been widely adopted. We propose the use of an intuitive and quantifiable measure that is amenable to both model building and hypothesis testing, and apply the method to a long-term, ongoing succession project in southeastern Ontario. We compare our measure with turnover rate (Diamond 1969) and lambda (Shugart and Hett 1973). We found that although these measures can determine when change within the community is occurring, the nature of this change and the resultant composition of the community is not readily gleaned from the measure. Our measure, by grouping plants as either 'early' or 'late', allows the relative composition of the community to be understood with a single number. The benefit of using an aggregate measure such as ours, is that a variety of questions can be examined, such as 'when will a community revert to its original composition following fire?' As an example, we utilized our measure on a post-fire succession data set from northern Montana. The results estimate that sites will take anywhere from 3 to 100 years to return to their pre-fire composition, based on current environmental conditionsKeywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reconstruction of a long-term recovery process from pasture to forestCommunity Ecology, 2000
- Analysis of a recovery process: Dwingelose Heide revisitedCommunity Ecology, 2000
- Plant Community Structure, and Its Relation to the Vertical Complexity of Communities: Dominance/Diversity and Spatial Rank ConsistencyOikos, 1994
- A Comparison of Rate of Succession Over 18 Yr in 10 Contrasting Old FieldsEcology, 1994
- Plant Dynamics of New Zealand Tussock Grassland Infested with Hieracium pilosella II. Transition Matrices of Vegetation ChangesJournal of Applied Ecology, 1990
- Insect Herbivory: Effects on Early Old Field Succession Demonstrated by Chemical Exclusion MethodsOikos, 1988
- A Case of Insect Grazing Affecting Plant SuccessionEcology, 1983
- Mechanisms of Succession in Natural Communities and Their Role in Community Stability and OrganizationThe American Naturalist, 1977
- Rate of Secondary Succession in Forest Bird CommunitiesOrnis Scandinavica, 1975
- Succession: Similarities of Species Turnover RatesScience, 1973