Impacts of Land-Use Changes on Vegetation and Ecosystem Functioning: Old-Field Secondary Succession
- PMID: 34065656
- PMCID: PMC8156868
- DOI: 10.3390/plants10050990
Impacts of Land-Use Changes on Vegetation and Ecosystem Functioning: Old-Field Secondary Succession
Abstract
The study of ecological succession to determine how plant communities re-assemble after a natural or anthropogenic disturbance has always been an important topic in ecology. The understanding of these processes forms part of the new theories of community assembly and species coexistence, and is attracting attention in a context of expanding human impacts. Specifically, new successional studies provide answers to different mechanisms of community assemblage, and aim to define the importance of deterministic or stochastic processes in the succession dynamic. Biotic limits, which depend directly on biodiversity (i.e., species competition), and abiotic filtering, which depends on the environment, become particularly important when they are exceeded, making the succession process more complicated to reach the previous disturbance stage. Plant functional traits (PFTs) are used in secondary succession studies to establish differences between abandonment stages or to compare types of vegetation or flora, and are more closely related to the functioning of plant communities. Dispersal limitation is a PFT considered an important process from a stochastic point of view because it is related to the establishing of plants. Related to it the soil seed bank plays an important role in secondary succession because it is essential for ecosystem functioning. Soil compounds and microbial community are important variables to take into account when studying any succession stage. Chronosequence is the best way to study the whole process at different time scales. Finally, our objective in this review is to show how past studies and new insights are being incorporated into the basis of classic succession. To further explore this subject we have chosen old-field recovery as an example of how a number of different plant communities, including annual and perennial grasslands and shrublands, play an important role in secondary succession.
Keywords: abiotic filtering; biotic limit; chronosequence; dynamic; grasslands; local species pool; plant functional types traits; priority effects; regional species pool; review; soil seed bank; soils traits; species coexistence.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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