limitation de succession - traduction vers français
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limitation de succession - traduction vers français

PROCESS OF CHANGE IN THE SPECIES STRUCTURE OF AN ECOLOGICAL COMMUNITY OVER TIME
Successional sequence; Plant succession; Succession rate; Old field succession; Old-field succession; Succession (ecology); Ecological Succession; Succession(ecology); Ecologic succession; Natural succession; Biological succession; Succession (biology); Microsuccession; Preclimax; Postclimax; Forest succession; Monoclimax
  • disturbance]]: a [[boreal forest]] one year (left) and two years (right) after a [[wildfire]].
  • 750px
  • The Indiana Dunes on Lake Michigan, which stimulated Cowles' development of his theories of ecological succession
  • Pond succession or sere A: emergent plant life B: sediment C: Emergent plants grow inwards, sediment accretes D: emergent and terrestrial plants E: sediment fills pond, terrestrial plants take over F: trees grow
  • A [[hydrosere]] community
  • The short-lived and shade-intolerant evergreen trees die as the larger deciduous trees overtop them. The ecosystem is now back to a similar state to where it began.
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  • ''Secondary succession'': trees are colonizing uncultivated fields and meadows.

limitation de succession      
n. limitation of succession

Définition

limitations
n.
1) to put limitations on
2) budgetary, financial limitations
3) within certain limitations

Wikipédia

Ecological succession

Ecological succession is the process of change in the species structure of an ecological community over time. The time scale can be decades (for example, after a wildfire) or more or less.

Bacteria allows for the cycling of nutrients such as carbon, nitrogen and sulphur.

The community begins with relatively few pioneering plants and animals and develops through increasing complexity until it becomes stable or self-perpetuating as a climax community. The "engine" of succession, the cause of ecosystem change, is the impact of established organisms upon their own environments. A consequence of living is the sometimes subtle and sometimes overt alteration of one's own environment.

Succession is a process by which an ecological community undergoes more or less orderly and predictable changes following a disturbance or the initial colonization of a new habitat. Succession may be initiated either by formation of new, unoccupied habitat, such as from a lava flow or a severe landslide, or by some form of disturbance of a community, such as from a fire, severe windthrow, or logging. Succession that begins in new habitats, uninfluenced by pre-existing communities is called primary succession, whereas succession that follows disruption of a pre-existing community is called secondary succession.

Succession was among the first theories advanced in ecology. Ecological succession was first documented in the Indiana Dunes of Northwest Indiana and remains an important ecological topic of study.