1. review- what effects do organisms do pioneer species have on an environment undergoing primary...

Post on 28-Dec-2015

248 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

1. Review- What effects do organisms do pioneer species have on an environment undergoing primary succession

2. Explain- why do communities change over time3. Apply Concepts- When a whale or other large

marine mammal dies and falls to the ocean floor, different waves of decomposers and scavengers feed off the carcass until nothing remains- do you think this is an example of succession- explain

CH 4 ECOSYSTEMS AND COMMUNITIES4.3 Succession

Krakatau exploded in 1883, leaving a tiny, barren island.

2 years later grasses were growing 14 years later there were 49 plant species, along

with lizards, birds, bats, and insects 1929, a forest containing 300 plant species had

grown How did the island ecosystem recover so quickly.

Ecological Succession

Series of more-or-less predictable changes that occur in a community over time Some species move in and some die out Number of species typically increase.

Primary Succession

Succession that begins with bare rock.

Primary Succession

Pioneer Species First species to colonize barren areas Lichen—mutualistic symbiosis between a fungus and

an alga- often the first life Fix atmospheric nitrogen, break down rock, and add

organic material to form soil.

Secondary Succession

Succession that begins with some surviving species and soil

Occurs faster than primary succession Often follows natural or human disturbance.

Climax Communities

Species in a stable, mature environment that won’t change into a different community.

Natural Disturbances

Secondary succession in healthy ecosystems after natural disturbances often reproduces the original climax community.

Human-Caused Disturbances

Ecosystems may or may not recover from extensive human disturbances.

Succession Lab

1. Place a handful of dried plant material into a clean jar

2. Fill the jar with boiled pond water and determine the initial pH of the water

3. Cover the jar and place it in an area that receives indirect light

4. Examine the jar every day for the next few days5. When the water in the jar appears cloudy, prepare

microscope slides of water from various levels of the jar using a pipette to collect the water

6. Look at the slides under the low powered objective lens and record your observations

Succession Analyze and Conclude

1. Infer- Why did you use boiled water2. Infer- Where did the organisms you saw come

from3. Draw Conclusions- Was ecological succession

occurring- give evidence to support your answer4. Evaluate and Revise- Check you results against

those of you classmates- Do they agree, how do you explain the differences

top related