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Hurricane Katrina Aug. 29, 2005

Disturbance & Ecological Succession. Hurricane Katrina Aug. 29, 2005. Image from http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/Images/katrina_goe_2005241_lrg.jpg. Disturbance & Ecological Succession.

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Hurricane Katrina Aug. 29, 2005

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  1. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Hurricane Katrina Aug. 29, 2005 Image from http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/Images/katrina_goe_2005241_lrg.jpg

  2. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Succession – directional change in community composition at a site (as opposed to simple fluctuations), initiated by natural or anthropogenic disturbance, or the creation of a new site Some biologists restrict the definition to directional replacement of species after disturbance Disturbance – a discrete event that damages or kills residents on a site; either catastrophic or non-catastrophic (Platt & Connell 2003) Photo of W. J. Platt at Camp Whispering Pines, LA from K. Harms; photo of J. H. Connell from UCSB

  3. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Catastrophic disturbance – a disturbance that kills all residents of all species on a site; i.e., creates a “blank slate” (Platt & Connell 2003) Mt. St. Helens, Washington, U.S.A. May 18, 1980 Photo of Mt. St. Helens from Wikipedia

  4. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Non-catastrophic disturbance – a disturbance that falls short of wiping out all organisms from a site; i.e., leaves “residual organisms” or “biological legacies” (Platt & Connell 2003) Yellowstone Nat’l. Park, U.S.A. just after 1988 fires Luquillo Experimental Forest, Puerto Rico just after 1989 Hurricane Hugo Photo of Yellowstone in 1988 from Wikipedia; Photo of Luquillo Forest, Puerto Rico in 1989 from http://pr.water.usgs.gov/public/webb/hurricane_hugo.html

  5. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary Succession – successionthat occurs after the creation of a “blank slate,” either through catastrophic disturbance or de novo creation of a new site Anak Krakatau, Indonesia appeared above water ~ 1930 Mt. St. Helens, Washington, U.S.A. May 18, 1980 Photo of Mt. St. Helens in 1980 from Wikipedia; Photo of Anak Krakatau from http://amazingindonesia.net/2008/06/mount-krakatoa-the-wrath-of-earth

  6. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Secondary Succession – succession that occurs after non-catastrophic disturbance (including “old fields”) Yellowstone Nat’l. Park, U.S.A. just after 1988 fires Luquillo Experimental Forest, Puerto Rico just after 1989 Hurricane Hugo Photo of Yellowstone in 1988 from Wikipedia; Photo of Luquillo Forest, Puero Rico in 1989 from http://pr.water.usgs.gov/public/webb/hurricane_hugo.html

  7. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Henry David Thoreau (1859)is often credited with coining “succession” as applied to directional changes in plant communities Thoreau made many remarkable observations at a time when many still believed in such phenomena as spontaneous generation “Though I do not believe that a plant will spring up where no seed has been, I have great faith in a seed. Convince me that you have a seed there, and I am prepared to expect wonders.” Photo of Thoreau from Wikipedia

  8. Disturbance & Ecological Succession A brief history of observations and ideas… H. Cowles (1899)– stressed the dynamic nature of “plant societies” (“phytosociology”) Examined species composition of Lake Michigan sand dunes & concluded that the dunes were older further inland, i.e., formed a “chronosequence” from which temporal change could be inferred (space-for-time substitution) Believed that succession tended toward a stable equilibrium that was never (or at least rarely) reached Photo of Cowles from http://oz.plymouth.edu/~lts/ecology/ecohistory/cowles.html; photo of Lake Michigan sand dune from http://ebeltz.net/folio/cfol-5.html

  9. Disturbance & Ecological Succession A brief history of observations and ideas… F. Clements (1916, 1928)– radical, “superorganism” view of communities; species interact to promote a directed pattern of community development through “seral” stages, ending in a “climax” community H. Gleason (1926, 1939)– “individualistic view of succession” in which “every species is a law unto itself” Our modern population-biology view derives primarily from Gleason’s conceptual model, even though Clementsian ideas of deterministic progression through seral to climax stages dominated ecological theory well into the 20th century (see Connell & Slatyer 1977) Photos from http://oz.plymouth.edu/~lts/ecology/ecohistory/history.html

  10. Disturbance & Ecological Succession A brief history of observations and ideas… F. Egler (1954)– made distinctions between primary succession (“relay floristics,” in which initially there is no vegetation) vs. secondary succession (following non-catastrophic disturbance of existing vegetation) Egler thought secondary successional patterns were driven by propagules present when the disturbance occurs (“initial floristic composition hypothesis”) In addition, he thought that changes in species abundances reflected differences in longevity of species

  11. Disturbance & Ecological Succession A brief history of observations and ideas… Four classic papers demonstrate the maturation of thought concerning the nature of trade-offs & colonization history within Gleason’s “individualistic” framework Horn & MacArthur (1972)– mathematical models of competition among fugitive species in a harlequin environment Drury & Nisbet (1973)– verbal models of succession driven by differences in dispersal & competitive ability, growth & survival Platt (1975)– empirical demonstration of mechanisms of coexistence of fugitive species on badger-mound disturbances Bormann & Likens (1979)– introduced the “shifting-mosaic steady-state” concept; within-patch non-equilibrial dynamics average to an equilibrium pattern at the scale of many such patches taken together

  12. Disturbance & Ecological Succession A brief history of observations and ideas… Connell & Slatyer (1977)– Reacted against an emphasis on life-history strategies & competition alone; recognized a variety of species interactions that could impact succession Three models of succession: 1. Facilitation –Early species enhance the establishment of later species (if it occurs, it is perhaps most likely in primary succession) 2. Tolerance – Early species have no effect on later species 3. Inhibition – Early species actively inhibit later species

  13. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession along the Glacier Bay chronosequence One of the world’s most rapid and extensive glacial retreats in modern times (so far); eliminated ~2500 km2 of ice in ~200 yr, exposing large expanses of nutrient-poor boulder till to biotic colonization Photo of Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska from Wikipedia

  14. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession along the Glacier Bay chronosequence Classical view of Glacier Bay succession based on 50 yr of research, which employed the simple chronosequence assumption: - Mosses - Mountain Avens (Dryas); shallow-rooted herbs - Willows (Salix); first prostrate, then shrubby species - Alder (Alnuscrispus); after 50 yr forms thickets to 10 m - Sitka Spruce (Piceasitchensis); invade alder thickets - Hemlock (Tsugaheterophylla); establish last Succession is driven by N-fixation (Dryas & Alnus) Alnus acidifies the soil, allowing Picea invasion Accumulation of soil carbon through succession improves soil texture and water retention, ultimately allowing invasion by Tsuga

  15. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession along the Glacier Bay chronosequence Fastie (1995)– Reconstructed patterns of stand development at several sites within the chronosequence; intensively analyzed tree-rings Figure from Fastie (1995)

  16. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession along the Glacier Bay chronosequence Fastie (1995)– Identified 3 alternative pathways of compositional change (not a single chronosequence of events): 1. Sites deglaciated prior to 1840 were colonized early byPicea & Tsuga 2. Sites deglaciated since 1840 were the only sites colonized early by N-fixing Alnus 3. Sites deglaciated since 1900 were the only sites dominated relatively early by black cottonwood (Populustrichocarpa)

  17. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession along the Glacier Bay chronosequence Oldest sites: DryasPicea & Tsuga Intermediate sites: DryasAlnusPicea Youngest sites: DryasAlnusPopulusPicea What accounts for these among-site differences in composition? Differences are unrelated to soil parent material Strong effect of seed source: Refugial Picea stands are concentrated at the mouth of the bay; distance from the nearest seed source explains 58% of among-site variance in early Picea recruitment Younger sites received more of their seed rain from new communities colonizing exposed surfaces than from refugial populations

  18. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession along the Glacier Bay chronosequence What about facilitation? Succession of Alnus to Picea was considered a textbook example of facilitation in the mid- to-late 20th century The real pattern is more complex! Alnus was absent on older sites, so Picea does not require it for establishment Alnus may either inhibit or facilitate seedling establishment of Picea Chapin et al. (1994)– Found net positive effects of Alnus on Picea on glacial moraines, but net negative effects on floodplains

  19. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Facilitation along cobble beaches of New England Bruno (2000)– Determined mechanisms by which Spartina alterniflora is a facilitator of relatively large impact on the community (i.e., a “foundation species” - Drayton [1972]; “keystone modifier” - Bond [1993]; “ecosystem or keystone engineer” - Jones et al. [1994]) Observations: Spartina occurs along the shore; cobble-beach plants occur behind Spartina Cobble-beach community is absent along breaks in the Spartina phalanx Photo by J. Bruno

  20. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Facilitation along cobble beaches of New England Bruno (2000) Question: At which life stage(s) is colonization cobble-beach plants limited to sites behind Spartina? Experiment: Addition experiments to determine limiting life stages (seed supply, seed germination, seedling emergence, seedling establishment & adult survival) for cobble-beach plants Results: Only seedling emergence & establishment were adversely affected by the absence of Spartina

  21. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Facilitation along cobble beaches of New England Bruno (2000) Question: By what mechanism(s) does Spartina facilitate seedling emergence & establishment of cobble-beach plants? Experiment: Conducted manipulations of water velocity, substrate stability, herbivory & soil quality in sites lacking Spartina Results: Substrate stability increased seedling emergence & establishment, whereas manipulations of the other factors had limited influence

  22. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Facilitation along cobble beaches of New England Bruno (2000) Conclusions: Spartina alterniflora acts as a foundation species, keystone modifier & ecosystemengineer) by stabilizing the substrate, enabling seedlings of cobble-beach plants to emerge & survive Photo by J. Bruno

  23. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on Krakatau & Anak Krakatau Explosion of Krakatau (1883) The loudest explosion ever heard by humans Created tsunamis that killed 30,000 people on larger islands & mainland The island was effectively “sterilized” Anak Krakatau Anak Krakatau (“Child of Krakatau”) appeared out of the ocean in ~1930 & has been growing ever since First analyses of colonizing vegetation were by Doctors van Leeuwen (~1930s); more recent expeditions by Robert J. Whittaker Photo of Anak Krakatau from http://amazingindonesia.net/2008/06/mount-krakatoa-the-wrath-of-earth

  24. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on Krakatau & Anak Krakatau Whittaker (1994)– Examined dispersal characteristics of plant arrivals Nearest mainland site is Sumatra (~ 50 km away); Nearest island is ~ 21 km away First arrivals (within 4 yr of eruption) were either wind or water dispersed Early zoochorous plants were dominated by figs; 17 of 24 fig species on the island arrived in the first 30 yr and are now canopy dominants, which suggests that bats have been very important dispersal vectors or mobile links (Old World bats have gut-retention times up to 12 hr)

  25. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on Krakatau & Anak Krakatau Whittaker (1994)– There are now 124 zoochorous species on Anak Krakatau Doves and pigeons (> 4 hr gut retention time) have been important dispersers subsequent to colonization of the island by figs (an indirect mechanism of facilitation by bats operating through figs?) Many large-seeded species are absent relative to Sumatra & the mainland flora

  26. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on Krakatau & Anak Krakatau Anak Krakatau Image taken June 11, 2005 from Ikonos satellite Image from http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/Images/krakatau.IKO2005_06_11_lrg.jpg

  27. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on the flanks of Mount St. Helens May 18, 1980 – the north face of the previously symmetrical mountain collapsed in a rock-debris avalanche that essentially wiped clean 60 km2 of forest Fagan & Bishop (2000)– Examined the influence of herbivores on the rate of spread of lupines (Lupinuslepidus), the site’s main “colonizing” species Mt. St. Helens, Washington, U.S.A. May 18, 1980 Photo of Mt. St. Helens from Wikipedia

  28. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on the flanks of Mount St. Helens Lupines are efficient N-fixers & trap detritus; they are often facilitators in ecological succession Lupines colonized from remnant populations elsewhere on the volcano to form patches Spread rapidly initially and then slowed Why? Figure from Fagan & Bishop (2000)

  29. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on the flanks of Mount St. Helens Fagan & Bishop (2000)– Ruled out various alternative explanations for slowed population growth rates & focused on the effect of insect herbivores, whose colonization lagged behind the lupines by 10 yr Experimental test: Established plots at the center of lupine patches (core) and at the edge of expanding patches (edge) Sprayed half of the plots with pyrethroid insecticide

  30. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on the flanks of Mount St. Helens Much higher incidence of damaging insects at patch edges Higher leaf damage at patch edges Figure from Fagan & Bishop (2000)

  31. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on the flanks of Mount St. Helens Lower seed production at patch edges Edge Site Core Site Why was there more herbivore activity at the edge? Densities of predators (e.g., spiders) & parasitoids (e.g., a tachinid fly) were 4x higher at the core vs. edge Predators may be more abundant in the core where plant density & productivity are higher Figure from Fagan & Bishop (2000)

  32. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Primary succession on the flanks of Mount St. Helens Fagan and Bishop (2000)– Diffusion model showed how reduced seed production at the edge affects rates of lupine spread (assuming no long-distance, jump-dispersal events) Figure from Fagan & Bishop (2000)

  33. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Horn (1975) Developed simple Markov models of successional replacement of temperate-zone tree species Forest consists of cells, each occupied by a single tree Probability of replacing an individual tree with a new individual of a given species is calculated from a transition matrix Example of transition matrix for four species (GB=grey birch; BG=black gum; RM=red maple; BE=beech) GB BG RM BE GB0.05 0.36 0.50 0.09 BG0.01 0.57 0.25 0.17 RM0 0.14 0.55 0.31 BE0 0.01 0.03 0.96 Initial composition vector: (100, 0, 0, 0) After 1 time step: (5, 36, 50, 9) Iterate this process & plot the changes in relative abundance…

  34. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Horn (1975) BE GB RM BG Figure from Horn (1975)

  35. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession One approach for estimating transition probabilities: proportional to the fraction of each species as saplings beneath adults, e.g., if 5% of saplings beneath GB are GB, then P(GB|GB)=0.05 – Horn (1975) If the same transition matrix is used throughout, then a stable composition (the dominant Eigenvector) will result (here dominated by BE) However, the Markov approach is phenomenological, so… Why do recruitment probabilities vary, i.e., what biological traits lead to different colonization rates & relative abundances?

  36. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) The most recent generation of forest simulation models; precursors include FORET (Shugart & West 1977) Spatially explicit, mechanistic simulation model developed to predict dynamics of succession for 9 species of northeastern U.S.A. hardwoods Early occupation by Red Oak (Quercus rubra) & Black Cherry (Prunus serotina) followed by late dominance by Beech (Fagus grandifolia) & Hemlock (Tsuga canadensis), with Yellow Birch (Betula alleghaniensis) present in gaps

  37. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) Basics of SORTIE: Spatially explicit model predicting the fate of every individual tree throughout its life Individual performance is affected by resource availability at each tree’s location (original SORTIE only included competition for light) Species-specific functions predict each individual’s growth, mortality, fecundity & dispersal; estimated from data collected in the field Four sub-models determine the fate of each individual throughout its life

  38. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) (1) Resource (light) submodel: Calculates light available to an individual based on its neighborhood; the process is analogous to taking a fisheye photo above each plant Calculates a projected cylindrical crown for each individual based on data relating crown diameter & depth to stem diameter Computes whole-season photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) for each plant based on the location & identity of neighbors Figure from Pacala et al. 1996

  39. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) (2) Growth sub-model: Species-specific equations predict radial growth from diameter & light availability Figure from Pacala et al. 1996

  40. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) (3) Mortality sub-model:Species-specific equations predict probability of death from an individual’s growth rate over the past 5 yr Figure from Pacala et al. 1996

  41. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) (4) Recruitment sub-model:Species-specific equations predict the number & spatial locations of seedlings based on the sizes of adult trees Figure from Pacala et al. 1996

  42. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) Community-level output:From randomly seeded initial composition Hemlock & Beech clearly dominated after 500 yr Figure from Pacala et al. 1996

  43. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) The mechanistic approach taken in this model allows one to ask: Which key traits define species performance? How sensitive are model predictions to parameter values (and therefore sampling errors in parameter estimation)? How would hypothetical species with different parameter values perform in this community? What would constitute a “superspecies” (i.e., one of J. Silvertown’s ecological / evolutionary “demons”)? How many species could potentially coexist, e.g., > 50 spp. for > 10,000 yr? How would changing abiotic / biotic conditions affect forest trajectories?

  44. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Modeling secondary succession – Pacala et al. (1996; SORTIE) See Doug Deutschman’s on-line visualization of SORTIE! Link to SORTIE visualization Baseline without disturbance Heavy disturbance Large, circular clear-cut Figures from Deutschman et al. 1997

  45. Disturbance & Ecological Succession Succession may involve changes beyond species composition… Community and Ecosystem Properties: Diversity – often increases throughout succession Standing-crop biomass – often increases throughout succession Elemental cycling & other biogeochemical processes – e.g., the Hubbard Brook experiments in New Hampshire, and Peter Vitousek’s work in Hawaii Susceptibility to disturbance – may be a function of time since last disturbance, e.g., fire and the accumulation of fuel loads

  46. Anthropogenic Disturbance & Ecological Succession If “all species have evolved in the presence of disturbance, and thus are in a sense matched to the recurrence pattern of the perturbation”, why are anthropogenic disturbances often so damaging? (Paine et al. 1998) Anthropogenic disturbances often differ from the natural disturbance regime in timing, frequency, or intensity Paine et al. (1998) also argued that: “more serious ecological consequences result from compounded perturbations within the normative recovery time of the community in question”

  47. Anthropogenic Disturbance & Ecological Succession A marine example: Corals in the Caribbean Hughes (1994, Science) One-two punch of overfishing (“selective disturbance”) & “natural” mass mortality of dominant urchins (Diadema) has created a “phase-shift” from coral-dominated to macroalgae-dominated reefs Caribbean coral reefs may never recover! Photo of macroalgae-dominated reef from http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0108-hance_coral.html

  48. Anthropogenic Disturbance & Ecological Succession A terrestrial example: Dipterocarps in southeast Asia Curran et al. (1999, Science) One-two punch of logging & increased frequency of El Niño events (due to anthropogenically induced climate change?) resulted in elimination of recruitment by dipterocarps in forests of Borneo! May result in a large-scale “phase-shift” away from dipterocarp domination of the forests [dipterocarps are the principal food of giant squirrels, bearded pigs, several species of parakeet & myriad specialist insects, etc.] Photo of dipterocarp forest from http://biology.ucsd.edu/news/article_012706.html

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