If we look at the development of the forest community, of the
grassland community, or of any community, we see that it proceeds
through stages. There are many plants which are not capable of living
except in high light intensity, yet whose life forms do not enable them
to persist into the mature community. Consequently, as communities
develop these species are eliminated. For example, the grasses that are
found in a city lawn are plants that require relatively high light
intensity. These grasses could not form the herb layer of a mature
forest community because, when the forest community is fully matured,
there is not enough light at the forest floor to support their growth.
These plants must live in an area which, for whatever reason, has few
trees. Many of the weeds, flowers, and herbs of open fields similarly
require high light intensity, and are not capable of sustaining
themselves in a mature forest community.
The structure of a city lawn is quite simple. The full intensity of
the sun strikes a single photosynthetic layer, passes through it, and
strikes the ground. A tremendous amount of energy, the same amount that
can support the full growth of the forest, is absorbed by these grassy
areas. It is this enormous amount of sunlight energy, capable of
completely sustaining the growth of the mature forest, that must be
overcome when grasses, lawns, meadows, and other nonforest community
structures are to be maintained in a city that was built in a climate
capable of supporting a deciduous forest.
As a community develops through pioneer stages, through herb, shrub,
and secondary layer stages, and finally into a mature community with a
closed canopy, many factors change. In an open community, where a great
deal of light reaches the floor of the community, high evaporation rates
and higher soil temperatures are likely to occur. Conversely, as a cover
is formed over the soil, the temperature of the soil surface is likely
to be reduced, and the rate of evaporation is likely to be less.
Moreover, the climate at the center of a mature plant community is
noticeably different from that at its fringes. Consequently, the
structure of the mature plant community deep in the deciduous forest
differs from the more open, pioneer community that lies at its
edges.
The most complicated community structure to be found in terrestrial
vegetation is that of the tropical rainforest. In addition to all of the
layers described for the deciduous temperate forest, a tropical
rainforest has great numbers of epiphytes which grow not only in the
canopy species, but in the secondary species. Spanish moss is the
epiphyte most common in the United States, particularly in Louisiana,
Mississippi, Florida, and other southern States. Spanish moss is quite
capable of sustaining its entire life cycle merely from the nutrients
and water that it gets from the air. In recent years, acres of forest in
southeastern Georgia, which normally abound in Spanish moss, have
suffered a loss of this plant and air pollution is suspected as the
culprit.
The changing factors in community development, then, proceed as the
community progresses from its pioneer stage to its mature stage. As the
community increases in complexity, with numbers of different kinds of
species, representing different life forms, occupying different niches
in the community, the photosynthetic efficiency of life processes for a
given parcel of ground also increases. This increase in the complexity
of the community provides a greater number of habitats for plants, as
well as a greater number of habitats for animals.
The ecological niche which the mature community provides for animals
is significant not only because of the great variety of habitats and
niches but also because the greater increase and efficiency of the
photosynthetic process make the community more likely to be able to
support an animal population. Of course, a great abundance of wildlife
is found at the perimeter of the forest. Here plants which are good for
forage for ungulates such as deer and game birds such as pheasant,
quail, and grouse are more plentiful than they are closer to the center
of the forest.
The photosynthetic apparatus of green plants is particularly well
adapted to harness the energy of the sun, and very little can stop,
hinder, or slow down the process of capturing sunlight energy and its
utilization in the living system.
|