Title: Vegetation Succession
1Vegetation Succession
Sand Dunes
V A VANNET
2Plant Succession
- Evolution of plant communities
- From pioneer species to climax vegetation
- Related to change in the environment
- Change brought about by the plants themselves
- This change then favours new species
- Plants are the architects of their own demise
3Sand Dune Transect
4The Foreshore
Salty
Blowing sand
Dry
5Saltwort
Fleshy leaves store water
Low growing
Deep tap roots
6Sandwort
Waxy leaves
7Sea Rocket
Fleshy, waxy leaves
Tap roots
8Frosted orache
Long tap roots
Mealy leaves are salt repellant
9Couch grass
Withstands modest burial
Leaves prostrate
Tolerates salt
10Saltwort
Frosted orache
Couch Grass
11Embryo Dunes
Highest tide line
On shore winds
Scattered foreshore plants
Seaweed (humus)
Sand builds up
12Level of built-up sand
13Embryo dune
Frosted orache
14Foredunes
Lyme grass (salt tolerant)
Couch grass (salt tolerant)
15Mobile (yellow) dunes
Marram grass
16Marram grass
- Cannot tolerate salt
- Thrives on being buried by sand
- Inrolled leaves
- Long tap roots
- Underground rhizomes stabilise dunes
17Much bare sand hence yellow
18Ragwort
Marram
19- Less bare sand
- More humus
- Lower pH
- Less Marram
- More competitors
20Fixed (grey) dunes
Other species dominate
Marram more sparse and weaker
21Increasing floristic diversity
Harebells
Restharrow
Bedstraw
22Parasol mushrooms
More humus and soil moisture
23Why grey?
Lichens
24Marram now very sparse
Ground cover almost complete
25Dune slacks
Lower relief intersects water table
Main dune ridge
26Phragmites reeds
27Rushes
28Seasonal slack
Creeping willow
Rushes
29Main dune ridge
Slack
Cotton grass
Dune heath
30Final stages of succession
Grassland
Heathland
Alkaline shell sand
Acid mineral sand
31Dune Scrub (often spinous!)
Buckthorn
Dog rose
Gorse
32Mixed Woodland Climax
Mans activities usually prevents this from
developing
33Back on the foreshore..
New embryo dunes are forming.