Rangeland Ecology & Management

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The use of chronosequences in studies of ecological succession and soil development
Author
Walker, Lawrence R
Wardle, David A
Bardgett, Richard D
Clarkson, Bruce D
Publisher
Journal of Ecology
Publication Year
2010
Body

1. Chronosequences and associated space-for-time substitutions are an important and often necessary tool for studying temporal dynamics of plant communities and soil development across multiple time-scales. However, they are often used inappropriately, leading to false conclusions about ecological patterns and processes, which has prompted recent strong criticism of the approach. Here, we evaluate when chronosequences may or may not be appropriate for studying community and ecosystem development.2. Chronosequences are appropriate to study plant succession at decadal to millennial time-scales when there is evidence that sites of different ages are following the same trajectory. They can also be reliably used to study aspects of soil development that occur between temporally linked sites over time-scales of centuries to millennia, sometimes independently of their application to shorter-term plant and soil biological communities.3. Some characteristics of changing plant and soil biological communities (e.g. species richness, plant cover, vegetation structure, soil organic matter accumulation) are more likely to be related in a predictable and temporally linear manner than are other characteristics (e.g. species composition and abundance) and are therefore more reliably studied using a chronosequence approach.4. Chronosequences are most appropriate for studying communities that are following convergent successional trajectories and have low biodiversity, rapid species turnover and low frequency and severity of disturbance. Chronosequences are least suitable for studying successional trajectories that are divergent, species-rich, highly disturbed or arrested in time because then there are often major difficulties in determining temporal linkages between stages.5. Synthesis. We conclude that, when successional trajectories exceed the life span of investigators and the experimental and observational studies that they perform, temporal change can be successfully explored through the judicious use of chronosequences.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
98
Journal Number
4
Journal Pages
725-736
Journal Name
Journal of Ecology
Keywords
ecosystem ecology
vegetation dynamics
soils
biodiversity
species richness
chronosequences
disturbance
plant communities
retrogression
soil biological communities
Soil Development
succession
temporal change