Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ecological_succession> ?p ?o }
- Ecological_succession abstract "Ecological succession is the observed 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 even millions of years after a mass extinction.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 ʺengineʺ of succession, the cause of ecosystem change, is the impact of established species upon their own environments. A consequence of living is the sometimes subtle and sometimes overt alteration of one's own environment.It is a phenomenon or 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. The study of succession remains at the core of ecological science. Ecological succession was first documented in the Indiana Dunes of Northwest Indiana which led to efforts to preserve the Indiana Dunes. Exhibits on ecological succession are displayed in the Hour Glass, a museum in Ogden Dunes.".
- Ecological_succession thumbnail Boreal_pine_forest_after_fire.JPG?width=300.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageExternalLink cowles.html.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageExternalLink ecosystems.html.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageExternalLink page119.html.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageID "322376".
- Ecological_succession wikiPageLength "31122".
- Ecological_succession wikiPageOutDegree "110".
- Ecological_succession wikiPageRevisionID "708085073".
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Acadia_National_Park.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Adolphe_Dureau_de_la_Malle.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Allogenic_succession.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Alternative_stable_state.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Anton_Kerner_von_Marilaun.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Autogenic_succession.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Bacteria.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Betula_papyrifera.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Biological_dispersal.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Biomass_(ecology).
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink California.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Category:Biology_terminology.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ecological_processes.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ecological_succession.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Category:Environmental_terminology.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Category:Habitat.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Chaparral.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Chronosequence.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Climate_change.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Climax_community.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Closed_canopy.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Community_(ecology).
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Competitive_exclusion_principle.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Connell–Slatyer_model_of_ecological_succession.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Contingency_(philosophy).
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Cyclic_succession.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Danube.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Denmark.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Disturbance_(ecology).
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Ecological_stability.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Ecology.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Ecosystem.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Eugene_Odum.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Eugenius_Warming.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Extinction_event.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Fire.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Frederic_Clements.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Fugitive.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Fungus.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Henry_A._Gleason_(botanist).
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Chandler_Cowles.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Henry_David_Thoreau.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Human_impact_on_the_environment.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Indiana_Dunes_National_Lakeshore.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Intermediate_Disturbance_Hypothesis.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Introduced_species.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink John_Curtis_(biologist).
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Lake_Michigan.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Landscape_ecology.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Landslide.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Lava.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Logging.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Microorganism.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Nutrient_cycle.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Opportunism.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Pedogenesis.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Pioneer_species.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Primary_production.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Primary_succession.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Probability.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Propagule.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Prunus_serotina.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink K_selection_theory.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Ramon_Margalef.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Whittaker.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Secondary_succession.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Self-perpetuation.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Seral_community.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Shade_tolerance.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Silviculture.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Species.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Species_diversity.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Stand_level_modelling.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Stochastic.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Stochastic_process.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink The_American_Naturalist.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Theoretical_ecology.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Trophic_level.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Chicago.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Vegetation.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Weather.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink Windthrow.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink File:Boreal_pine_forest_after_fire.JPG.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink File:Forest_succession_depicted_over_time.png.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink File:Indiana_dunes.jpg.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink File:Schleienloecher2-1-_C.jpg.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink File:Secondary_Succession.png.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLink File:Secondary_succesion_cm01.jpg.
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ecological succession".
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLinkText "Succession".
- Ecological_succession wikiPageWikiLinkText "Successional".