Ecological Succession – UPSC Notes

Ecological Succession | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS Bangalore
UPSC Prelims · Environment & Ecology

Ecological Succession

Stages · Primary · Secondary · Autogenic · Allogenic · Succession in Plants & Water — simple language · MCQs · PYQs

1

What is Ecological Succession?

How nature rebuilds itself over time
Definition

Ecological succession is the gradual, directional, and predictable process by which the species composition of a community changes over time — from a simpler, pioneer community to a more complex, stable community called the climax community.

🔑 Key Characteristics

  • Directional: Change always moves in one direction — from simple to complex.
  • Predictable: The sequence of communities that appear is largely predictable for a given region.
  • Gradual: It occurs slowly over decades, centuries, or even millennia.
  • Ends in Climax Community: A stable, self-sustaining community that does not change unless disturbed.
  • Each intermediate community in the sequence is called a seral community or sere.
  • The entire sequence from pioneer to climax is called a seral series or prisere.
💡 Simple Example

Imagine a bare rock after a volcanic eruption. Over hundreds of years: lichens grow first → mosses appear → grasses follow → shrubs come in → trees establish → a stable forest develops. This entire journey from bare rock to forest is ecological succession. The forest at the end is the climax community.

🎯 Easy Way to Remember

Think of ecological succession like the growth of a city. A barren land first gets small shops, then apartments, then schools and hospitals — slowly becoming a fully functioning city. Nature does the same with living communities — starting small and building up to a complex, stable system.

🔑 Key Terms to Know

  • Pioneer species: The first organisms to colonise a barren area (e.g., lichens on bare rock, phytoplankton in a new pond).
  • Seral community (Sere): Each intermediate stage between pioneer and climax community.
  • Climax community: The final, stable community at the end of succession — in equilibrium with the local climate.
  • Nudation: The process of formation of a bare area (by fire, landslide, glaciation) which triggers succession.
  • Facilitation: When early pioneer species modify the environment and make it suitable for the next community to come in.
📌 UPSC Angle

Ecological succession has been directly tested in UPSC 2013 (grassland succession PYQ). Understand it as a concept that explains how ecosystems recover from damage — relevant to topics like forest fires, volcanic eruptions, dam construction, and climate change. The concepts of pioneer species, climax community, and seral stages frequently appear in statement-based questions.

2

Stages in Ecological Succession

The step-by-step journey from bare land to climax forest
Overview

Ecological succession proceeds through a series of well-defined stages. Each stage (seral community) modifies the environment — changing soil, microclimate, and available resources — making it suitable for the next, more complex community. The process continues until the climax community is established.

1

Nudation

Bare area formed

2

Migration

Propagules arrive

3

Ecesis

Species establish

4

Aggregation

Numbers increase

5

Competition

Species compete

6

Reaction

Habitat modified

7

Climax

Stable community

🔑 Detailed Explanation of Each Stage

  1. Nudation: A bare area is created — by volcanic eruption, glaciation, fire, flood, or human activity. This is the starting point of succession.
  2. Migration (Invasion): Seeds, spores, and propagules of organisms arrive at the bare area through wind, water, or animals.
  3. Ecesis (Establishment): Some of the arriving organisms successfully germinate, grow, and reproduce. These become the pioneer species.
  4. Aggregation: Pioneer species multiply and increase in number. Their populations grow and they begin to cover the area.
  5. Competition and Coaction: As populations grow, species compete with each other for space, light, water, and nutrients. Some species begin to dominate.
  6. Reaction: The living organisms modify their physical environment — changing soil chemistry, humidity, light availability, and temperature. This makes the area suitable for a new, different community, causing the current community to be replaced.
  7. Climax: A final, stable community establishes itself that is in balance with the local climate. This community no longer changes unless disturbed — it is self-sustaining.
💡 What Happens During Reaction?

When lichens grow on bare rock, they release acids that slowly break down the rock, creating a thin layer of soil. Mosses can then grow in this soil. Mosses add more organic matter, building up soil further. Grasses follow, then shrubs, then trees. Each community reacts on the environment to make it ready for the next. This is the core mechanism that drives succession forward.

🔑 What Changes During Succession?

  • Species diversity increases from pioneer to climax stage.
  • Biomass (total weight of living organisms) increases.
  • Food web becomes more complex.
  • Net primary productivity (NPP) initially increases, then stabilises in the climax.
  • The ratio of Gross Primary Production (GPP) to Respiration (R) moves toward 1 as the community matures.
  • Soil depth, organic matter, and nutrient content increase.
  • Community becomes more resistant to external disturbances (more stable).
📌 UPSC Angle

The stages of succession — especially nudation, ecesis, and reaction — can appear in UPSC as match-the-following or statement-based questions. Know that the reaction stage is the most important — it is the mechanism that actually drives succession forward by changing the habitat. Also remember: species diversity and biomass both increase through succession.

3

Primary Succession

Starting from absolute zero — no soil, no life
Definition

Primary succession is the process of ecological succession that begins in a completely barren area where no soil exists and no living organisms or seeds are present. It starts from scratch — on newly formed land.

🔑 Key Features

  • Begins on surfaces with no soil and no biological legacy (no previous organisms).
  • Takes an extremely long time — hundreds to thousands of years.
  • Pioneer species are typically lichens (on rock) or algae/phytoplankton (in water).
  • Soil is built from scratch through the weathering of rock and accumulation of organic matter.
  • Involves the largest changes in species composition over time.
💡 Where Does Primary Succession Start?

Bare rock after a volcanic eruption (e.g., newly formed islands like Surtsey in Iceland). Glacial moraines left behind after a glacier retreats. Sand dunes newly formed along coastlines. Lava flows that solidify and cool. Newly formed ponds or lakes created by geological events. All of these are completely bare areas with no soil — and primary succession slowly builds life from nothing.

🔑 Sequence of Primary Succession on Rock (Xerosere)

  1. Crustose lichens — the very first colonisers; grow directly on bare rock; produce acids that slowly break down rock.
  2. Foliose lichens — more complex lichens; add more organic matter.
  3. Mosses — grow in the thin soil formed; hold moisture and add more organic matter.
  4. Herbaceous plants (grasses, herbs) — as soil deepens, grasses and small herbs establish.
  5. Shrubs — shade out herbaceous plants; further modify soil.
  6. Trees (climax forest) — large trees eventually dominate; a stable forest climax community is reached.
🎯 Easy Analogy

Primary succession is like building a house on an empty plot — you first need to lay the foundation (soil), then the walls (pioneer plants), then the roof (canopy trees) — everything is built from zero.

📌 UPSC Angle

Know that lichens are the pioneer species in primary succession on rock — this is a frequently tested fact. Also know that primary succession is very slow because soil must be built from scratch. The newly formed volcanic islands (like Surtsey) are real-world examples of primary succession that UPSC may use as context in questions.

4

Secondary Succession

Rebuilding after a disturbance
Definition

Secondary succession is the process of ecological succession that occurs in an area where a community has been destroyed or removed but the soil, seed bank (dormant seeds in the soil), and some organisms still remain. It is a restart, not a fresh start.

🔑 Key Features

  • Begins on surfaces where soil already exists and may contain seeds, roots, or dormant organisms.
  • Much faster than primary succession — takes decades to a few centuries, not millennia.
  • Pioneer species are often grasses, weeds, and fast-growing herbs (not lichens — soil is already present).
  • The existing seed bank in the soil speeds up recovery considerably.
  • Soil does not need to be created — it already has nutrients and organic matter.
💡 Where Does Secondary Succession Start?

After a forest fire — soil and roots remain; grasses grow back within weeks, shrubs within years, trees within decades. After a flood — once waters recede, pioneer plants regrow from the existing seed bank. Abandoned farmland — when farming stops, wild plants colonise the field; over time it returns to woodland. After a landslide — the exposed area has soil from below and seeds blown in from nearby areas. Cleared forests — areas where trees were cut down begin secondary succession naturally.

🎯 Primary vs Secondary — One-Line Memory Trick

Primary = No soil, no seeds, starts from scratch. Secondary = Soil present, seeds present, rebuilding after damage. Think: Primary is like building a new house on empty land. Secondary is like renovating a damaged house — the foundation is already there.

📌 UPSC Angle

Secondary succession is more relevant to current conservation scenarios — forest fires, deforestation, and flood-damaged ecosystems all trigger secondary succession. UPSC links this to India’s ecosystem restoration policies. The key fact: Secondary succession is always faster than primary succession because soil is already present. This is a frequently tested comparison.

5

Autogenic and Allogenic Succession

Who drives the change — organisms or the environment?
Two Types Based on What Drives the Change

Ecological succession can be driven by two different forces — the organisms themselves, or outside physical forces. These give us Autogenic Succession and Allogenic Succession.

Autogenic Succession
Definition

Autogenic succession is driven by the organisms within the community itself. The community modifies its own physical environment through biological processes — and these modifications make the area suitable for a new, different community to replace it.

🔑 Key Points — Autogenic

  • The cause of change is internal — the organisms are the engine of change.
  • Example: Lichens break down rock and create soil → soil allows mosses to grow → mosses add organic matter → this allows grasses to grow → and so on. Each community creates the conditions for the next.
  • Most natural successions (on rock, in ponds) are primarily autogenic.
  • The word auto = self; the community changes itself.
Allogenic Succession
Definition

Allogenic succession is driven by external physical or environmental forces — not by the organisms themselves. The community changes because the external environment around it changes.

🔑 Key Points — Allogenic

  • The cause of change is external — an outside force disturbs or changes the environment.
  • Examples of external forces: climate change, glaciation, fire, floods, drought, volcanic eruption, human deforestation.
  • Example: A river changes its course and dries up a pond → the pond’s aquatic community disappears and a terrestrial community begins — this is allogenic succession driven by physical change.
  • Example: A long drought causes a forest to change into grassland — driven by external climate, not by the organisms themselves.
  • The word allo = other/external; the change comes from outside.
💡 Side-by-Side Example

Autogenic: A pond fills up with sediment and organic matter (added by aquatic plants and animals over time) — the pond slowly becomes shallower, then marshy, then a meadow. The organisms themselves filled it in.

Allogenic: A river floods and deposits a thick layer of sand over a forest — the forest community is replaced by sand-tolerant plants. The change was caused by an external force (flood), not the forest organisms.

📌 UPSC Angle

Autogenic vs Allogenic is a conceptual distinction that can appear in match-the-following or statement-based questions. Key rule: Autogenic = community changes itself from within. Allogenic = external forces change the community from outside. Human activities like deforestation and dam construction are classic examples of allogenic succession triggers.

6

Succession in Plants

Xerosere — succession on dry, bare land
Definition

Xerosere is the type of ecological succession that occurs in a dry environment — on bare rock, sand dunes, or dry land where water is scarce. It is a type of primary succession on land. The word comes from Greek: xero = dry, sere = series of communities.

🔑 Stages of Xerosere (Succession on Bare Rock → Climax Forest)

  1. Crustose Lichen Stage (Pioneer Stage):
    Crustose lichens (flat, crust-like) are the first colonisers. They attach directly to bare rock. They secrete acids that chemically weather the rock. On death, they add a thin layer of organic matter. Extremely slow stage.
  2. Foliose Lichen Stage:
    Slightly more complex lichens with leaf-like structures colonise the area. They add more organic matter and accelerate rock weathering. A very thin humus-like layer begins to form.
  3. Moss Stage:
    Mosses (bryophytes) grow in the thin soil formed. They can hold water and significantly add to organic matter. Soil depth increases. The environment becomes moister.
  4. Herbaceous Stage (Herb/Grass Stage):
    As soil becomes deeper and nutrient-rich, grasses and herbs colonise. They have proper root systems. Annual plants appear first, then perennials. Shade increases and soil quality improves rapidly.
  5. Shrub Stage:
    Shrubs (bushy woody plants) replace grasses. They create significant shade, making it difficult for grasses to survive. Soil is now deep, rich, and moist. Insects, birds, and small animals begin to appear.
  6. Woodland/Forest Stage (Climax):
    Trees (first small trees, then larger ones) eventually dominate. A complex, multi-layered forest develops — with a canopy, understorey, shrub layer, and forest floor. This is the climax community — stable, diverse, and self-sustaining.
💡 Example — Sand Dune Succession (Psammosere)

Sand dunes on a coastline undergo their own version of xerosere: bare sand → sea couch grass (stabilises sand) → marram grass (deeper roots) → other grasses and herbs → shrubs → eventually a coastal scrub or woodland. Each plant stabilises the sand more and adds organic matter, enabling the next stage.

📌 UPSC Angle

The sequence Lichens → Mosses → Herbs → Shrubs → Trees is the most tested succession sequence in UPSC. Know that lichens are ALWAYS the pioneer species on bare rock. The climax vegetation depends on the local climate — in a tropical region the climax is a tropical rainforest; in a temperate region it is a temperate deciduous forest; in an arid region it may be a thorn forest or savanna.

7

Succession in Water

Hydrosere — succession in a freshwater lake or pond
Definition

Hydrosere is the type of ecological succession that begins in a freshwater environment — a lake, pond, or slow-moving water body. Over time, the water body fills up with sediments and organic matter, becoming progressively shallower, until it eventually turns into a terrestrial ecosystem. It is a type of primary succession in water.

🔑 Stages of Hydrosere (Pond → Forest)

  1. Phytoplankton Stage (Pioneer Stage):
    In a newly formed, deep, clear lake — microscopic floating algae (phytoplankton) are the first colonisers. They begin to add organic matter as they die. Zooplankton and microscopic animals follow.
  2. Rooted Submerged Plant Stage:
    As sediment accumulates and the lake becomes shallower, rooted aquatic plants (like Hydrilla, Potamogeton) grow on the bottom. They add more organic matter and further raise the lake bottom.
  3. Rooted Floating Plant Stage:
    The lake becomes shallower still. Plants with floating leaves appear — water lilies (Nymphaea), water lettuce (Pistia), lotus (Nelumbo). These shade the water below, reducing deeper aquatic plant growth.
  4. Reed Swamp Stage (Amphibious Stage):
    Tall emergent plants like reeds (Phragmites), bulrushes, and cattails (Typha) grow at the water’s edge. Their roots trap more sediment. The water body shrinks. Swamp conditions develop.
  5. Marsh/Meadow Stage:
    The area becomes very shallow or waterlogged. Sedges, grasses, and marsh plants dominate. The area is periodically dry. It is now a wetland or marsh — not open water any more.
  6. Woodland/Forest Stage (Climax):
    As the area dries completely, terrestrial shrubs and trees colonise. Over time, a forest develops on what was once a lake. The climax community is now a terrestrial forest — the hydrosere has become a xerosere-type climax.
💡 Real-World Example

Many small lakes and ponds around the world are gradually undergoing hydrosere. Wetlands like Loktak Lake (Manipur) and Chilika Lake (Odisha) show signs of succession — their edges are progressively being colonised by reeds and marsh plants. The famous floating phumdi (heterogeneous mass of vegetation) in Loktak is essentially a stage in the hydrosere process.

🎯 Xerosere vs Hydrosere — Quick Memory

Xerosere = starts DRY (bare rock/sand) → ends in forest. Hydrosere = starts WET (open water) → ends in forest. Both end in the same destination — a stable terrestrial climax forest — but they start from opposite extremes.

📌 UPSC Angle

Hydrosere is linked to wetland conservation — a hot UPSC topic. The filling up of lakes and ponds (eutrophication) can accelerate hydrosere artificially. Know that phytoplankton are the pioneer species in aquatic succession — just as lichens are in terrestrial (rock) succession. The wetland-to-forest conversion also has implications for carbon sequestration and climate, relevant to current affairs questions.


Master Comparison

All types of succession at a glance

Primary vs Secondary Succession

ParameterPrimary SuccessionSecondary Succession
Starting pointCompletely bare area — no soil, no lifeDisturbed area — soil and seeds still present
CauseNew land formation (volcano, glacier retreat)Destruction of existing community (fire, flood, farming)
SpeedVery slow — hundreds to thousands of yearsRelatively fast — decades to centuries
Pioneer speciesLichens (on rock), phytoplankton (in water)Grasses, weeds, fast-growing herbs
Soil formationSoil must be built from scratchSoil already exists; nutrients available
Seed bankNone present initiallyPresent in existing soil
Climax communitySame — a stable forest or grasslandSame — returns to original or similar climax
ExampleBare lava, newly exposed glacial rock, new sand dunesAfter forest fire, abandoned farmland, post-flood area

Autogenic vs Allogenic Succession

ParameterAutogenic SuccessionAllogenic Succession
Driver of changeOrganisms within the community (internal)External physical/environmental forces
MechanismCommunity modifies its own environmentOutside forces alter the environment
Examples of causesSoil formation by lichens, silt deposition by aquatic plantsClimate change, fire, flood, glaciation, human clearing
Most natural successionsYes — most natural successions are autogenicLess common; often involves disturbance events
Word originAuto = selfAllo = other/external

Xerosere vs Hydrosere

ParameterXerosereHydrosere
MeaningSuccession on dry landSuccession in freshwater
Starting environmentDry bare rock or sandOpen water — lake or pond
Pioneer speciesCrustose lichensPhytoplankton (algae)
Key stagesLichens → Mosses → Herbs → Shrubs → ForestPhytoplankton → Submerged plants → Floating plants → Reeds → Marsh → Forest
End point (Climax)Terrestrial forestTerrestrial forest (same!)
ExampleBare volcanic rock, sand dunesAgeing lake, pond, slow river

🧪 Practice MCQs — Test Yourself
Practice
Q1. The final, stable community at the end of ecological succession that remains in balance with the local climate is called:
✅ Answer: (c) Climax community
The climax community is the final, stable, self-sustaining community at the end of succession — in equilibrium with the local climate. It does not change unless disturbed. A pioneer community is the very first community. A seral community is any intermediate stage. Climax community = the final destination of the successional journey.
Practice
Q2. Pioneer species in primary succession on bare rock are:
✅ Answer: (b) Lichens
Lichens (specifically crustose lichens) are the pioneer species in primary succession on bare rock. They can survive on bare rock with no soil, secrete acids that weather the rock, and add organic matter on death — creating conditions for mosses to follow. Phytoplankton are pioneer species in aquatic succession (hydrosere). Grasses are a later stage, not pioneers on rock.
Practice
Q3. Consider the following statements about Primary and Secondary Succession: 1. Primary succession is always faster than secondary succession. 2. Secondary succession starts where soil already exists. 3. Lichens are the pioneer species in primary succession on bare rock. Which is/are correct?
✅ Answer: (b) — Statements 2 and 3 only
Statement 1 ❌ Wrong: It is secondary succession that is faster — not primary. Primary succession is very slow (needs soil to be formed from scratch). Secondary succession is faster because soil and seeds already exist. Statement 2 ✅ Correct: Secondary succession starts in areas where the community was destroyed but soil remains. Statement 3 ✅ Correct: Crustose lichens are the pioneer species on bare rock.
Practice
Q4. Which of the following correctly describes Autogenic Succession?
✅ Answer: (b)
Autogenic succession is internally driven — the organisms within the community modify their own environment (e.g., lichens create soil from rock, aquatic plants fill up a pond with organic matter) causing themselves to be replaced by the next community. Option (a) describes Allogenic succession (driven by external forces). Option (c) describes Hydrosere. Option (d) describes Primary succession / Xerosere.
Practice
Q5. The correct sequence of stages in Hydrosere (succession in a freshwater pond) is:
✅ Answer: (c)
The correct Hydrosere sequence: Phytoplankton (pioneer) → Rooted submerged plants (Hydrilla) → Rooted floating plants (Water lily) → Reed swamp (Typha/Phragmites) → Marsh/Meadow → Woodland/Forest (Climax). Option (a) is Xerosere (succession on rock). The sequence follows the gradual shallowing of the water body from a deep lake to a terrestrial forest.
Practice
Q6. During ecological succession, which of the following changes occur as the community moves from pioneer to climax stage? 1. Species diversity increases. 2. Biomass decreases. 3. Food web becomes more complex. 4. Soil organic matter increases. Select the correct answer:
✅ Answer: (d) — 1, 3 and 4 only
As succession progresses: 1 ✅ Species diversity increases — from simple pioneer communities to complex climax communities. 2 ❌ Biomass actually increases (more plants and animals accumulate) — not decreases. So Statement 2 is wrong. 3 ✅ Food web becomes more complex — more species = more feeding relationships. 4 ✅ Soil organic matter increases — as more organisms live and die, organic matter accumulates in soil.
Practice
Q7. A forest is completely destroyed by a volcanic lava flow. After the lava cools, new plants begin to colonise. This is an example of:
✅ Answer: (a) Primary succession — Allogenic type
This is Primary succession because lava destroys all life and covers the soil — the new colonisation begins on bare rock with no soil or seed bank (starting from zero). It is Allogenic because the cause is an external physical force (volcanic eruption) — not the organisms themselves. If the forest had just been cleared by humans or fire and soil remained, it would be secondary succession.
📜 UPSC Prelims PYQs — Official Past Questions
PYQUPSC 2013
In the grasslands, trees do not replace the grasses as a part of an ecological succession because of:
✅ Official Answer: (c) Water limitations and Fires
In grassland ecosystems, ecological succession is arrested (stopped) at the grass stage — trees never take over. Two reasons: (1) Water limitation — grassland rainfall is sufficient for grasses but not enough for trees to develop deep root systems and survive dry seasons. (2) Periodic fires (natural or human-set) kill tree seedlings before they mature, while grasses regenerate rapidly from their deep roots. This is a case of arrested succession or a sub-climax community.
PYQUPSC 2014
Which one of the following is the correct sequence of ecosystems in the order of decreasing productivity?
✅ Official Answer: (c)
Net Primary Productivity (decreasing order): Mangroves > Tropical Rainforest > Temperate Forest > Tropical Grassland > Temperate Grassland > Lakes > Open Ocean > Desert. This relates to succession because more productive ecosystems are generally more mature (closer to a climax state). Mangroves and tropical rainforests are the most complex and productive ecosystems — representing late-stage succession communities.
PYQUPSC 2022
“If rainforests and tropical forests are the lungs of the Earth, then surely wetlands function as its kidneys.” Which one of the following functions of wetlands best reflects the above statement?
✅ Official Answer: (b) Filtering and purifying water
Kidneys filter impurities from blood. Wetlands similarly filter and purify water — they trap sediments, absorb excess nutrients, and remove pollutants from water that drains into them. This connects to succession — wetlands are often an intermediate stage in hydrosere (the reed swamp stage), and their filtering function is critical for clean water supply downstream. Their destruction through rapid succession (eutrophication) reduces this service.
PYQUPSC 2016
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment describes ecosystem services as Provisioning, Supporting, Regulating, Preserving and Cultural. Which one of the following is a Supporting service?
✅ Official Answer: (c) Nutrient cycling
This is relevant to succession because nutrient cycling is a Supporting service — and it is the mechanism that fuels succession. As each seral community dies and decomposes, nutrients are recycled into the soil, enriching it and enabling the next community. Without nutrient cycling (a supporting service), succession would stall. Note: “Preserving” is NOT a real MEA category — it is a UPSC trap. The actual four categories are Provisioning, Regulating, Cultural, and Supporting.
PYQUPSC 2019
Consider the following statements: 1. The boundaries of a National Park are defined by legislation. 2. A Biosphere Reserve is declared to conserve a few specific species of flora and fauna. 3. In a Wildlife Sanctuary, limited biotic interference is permitted. Which is/are correct?
✅ Official Answer: (c) 1 and 3 only
Connected to succession: Biosphere Reserves protect entire ecosystems — including all succession stages from pioneer to climax. Statement 1 ✅: NP boundaries are set by law under WPA 1972. Statement 2 ❌: BRs are NOT for a few specific species — they protect entire landscape-level ecosystems and their successional processes. Statement 3 ✅: Wildlife Sanctuaries allow limited human activities like collection of minor forest produce.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Ecological succession is the gradual, step-by-step change in the types of living organisms in an area over a long period of time — from a simple, early community to a complex, stable final community (called the climax community). Think of it as nature’s way of slowly rebuilding or improving an ecosystem. Example: a bare rock gradually becomes a forest over hundreds of years — that process is ecological succession.
Primary succession starts on a completely bare area with no soil and no life (e.g., bare rock after a volcano). It is very slow — taking hundreds to thousands of years. Pioneer species are lichens. Secondary succession starts where a community was destroyed but soil and seeds still remain (e.g., after a forest fire). It is much faster — decades to centuries. Pioneer species are grasses and fast-growing weeds. Simple memory: Primary = starting from zero. Secondary = rebuilding after damage.
Autogenic succession is driven by the organisms within the community — they modify their own environment and cause the next community to replace them (e.g., lichens create soil that allows mosses to grow). Allogenic succession is driven by external physical forces — climate change, fire, flood, glaciation, or human activity (e.g., a drought forces a forest to give way to grassland). Auto = self-driven; Allo = externally driven.
A climax community is the final, stable community at the end of succession — it is in balance with the local climate and does not change on its own. It is self-sustaining. However, it CAN change if there is a major external disturbance — a fire, flood, volcanic eruption, or large-scale human activity can destroy a climax community and restart succession (secondary succession). So climax communities are stable, but not permanent in the face of disturbance.
Xerosere is succession on dry land — starting on bare rock or sand, with lichens as the first colonisers, progressing through mosses, herbs, shrubs, and finally a forest. Hydrosere is succession in freshwater — starting in an open lake or pond, with phytoplankton as pioneers, progressing through submerged plants, floating plants, reeds, marsh, and eventually a terrestrial forest. Both are types of primary succession and both end at a terrestrial forest — they just start from opposite extremes (dry vs wet).
This is a classic UPSC question. In grasslands, ecological succession is arrested at the grass stage — trees never successfully take over. Two reasons: (1) Water limitation — grasslands receive enough rainfall for grasses to survive, but not enough for trees to develop the deep root systems needed to survive dry seasons. (2) Periodic fires — natural fires or human-set fires regularly burn the grassland; tree saplings are killed by fire, but grass roots survive underground and regrow quickly. Grasses have evolved to thrive in fire; trees have not.
As succession progresses from pioneer to climax stage: Biodiversity (species diversity) increases — more species arrive and establish over time. Biomass increases — more plants and animals accumulate, adding weight to the system. Food web becomes more complex — more feeding relationships develop. Soil quality improves — organic matter and depth increase. Net Primary Productivity increases initially and then stabilises in the mature climax community. The climax community is the most diverse and biomass-rich state of the ecosystem.
The Reaction stage is the most important stage — it is the actual engine that drives succession forward. In this stage, the existing community modifies its own physical environment — changing soil chemistry, moisture levels, light penetration, and temperature. These changes make the current habitat unsuitable for the existing community but suitable for a new, different community. This is how one seral stage gives way to the next. Without reaction, succession would simply stop after the pioneer stage. Example: Lichens react on bare rock by producing acids, slowly forming soil — enabling mosses to then colonise and replace them.
Succession is central to several UPSC-relevant conservation topics: (1) Forest restoration — cleared forests undergo secondary succession; protecting them allows natural recovery. (2) Wetland conservation — wetlands are intermediate succession stages (hydrosere); eutrophication accelerates their succession into dry land, reducing biodiversity and water purification services. (3) Grassland management — controlled burning prevents succession to scrubland and maintains grassland habitats for endangered grassland birds like the Great Indian Bustard. (4) Invasive species — they can hijack succession and prevent native climax communities from forming.
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