SPECIES INTERACTION and ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION
SPECIES INTERACTION and ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION
SPECIES INTERACTION and ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION
Ecological Succession
Species Interaction
• It describes the relationships among
organisms of different species living in
the same location.
Examples include herbivores eating plants,
carnivores eating other animals, and organisms
competing for food, space, or mates.
There are a vast
number of interactions
between species. Some
interactions are direct –
lions killing and eating
gazelle, or clownfish
living safely within the
tentacles of sea
anemones. But many
more interactions are
indirect, and therefore
less obvious.
A consequence of the
direct and indirect
interactions between
species is that changes
in one species, for
example, changes in the
number of individuals,
their health, or their
geographic distribution,
will almost certainly
affect other species and
other parts of the Earth
system.
Ecological Succession
Secondary succession
begins after a disturbance,
like a fire. Crucially, some
soil and nutrients remain
present—fire, in fact, may
help recycle those nutrients.
A climax community is the “endpoint” of
succession within the context of a particular
climate and geography.
INTRASPECIF INTERSPECIF
IC IC
• INTRASPECIFIC competition occurs when two or more
individuals of the same species simultaneously demand
use of a limited resource (Wilson, 1975).