156
4
Community Responses to Changing
Conditions over Time: Succession 151
- Ecological succession is the process of community
development over time, which involves species in one stage
being replaced by different species. - Primary succession is the change in species composition
over time in an environment that was not previously inhabited
by organisms; examples include bare rock surfaces, such
as recently formed volcanic lava and rock scraped clean by
glaciers. Secondary succession is the change in species
composition that takes place after some disturbance destroys
the existing vegetation; soil is already present. Examples include
abandoned farmland and open areas caused by forest fires. - Scientific evidence supporting evolution comes from the fossil
record, comparative anatomy, biogeography, and molecular
biology.
10 20
Human Pig Duck
Rattlesnake
Tuna Moth Yeast
03040506070
Number of nucleotide base differences
Time
Key Terms
biome 128
boreal forest 133
chaparral 137
desert 138
ecological succession 151
ecosystem services 145
estuary 146
evolution 147
flowing-water ecosystem 144
freshwater wetlands 145
natural selection 148
savanna 140
standing-water ecosystem 142
temperate deciduous forest 135
temperate grassland 136
temperate rain forest 134
tropical rain forest 140
tundra 132
What is happening in this picture?
s This 1994 image from Yellowstone
National Park shows young
lodgepole pines growing among
trees burned in the massive
1988 wildfires. What community
process is taking place?
s What type of biome is pictured
here? What other biomes are
susceptible to fires? How do
humans increase the fire risk in
these biomes?
Fzançois Gohier/Science Source Images