Ecological Succession Worksheet
Name ____Key_________
Succession, a series of environmental changes, occurs in all ecosystems. The stages that
any ecosystem passes through are predictable. In this activity, you will place the stages of
succession of two ecosystems into sequence. You will also describe changes in an ecosystem and
make predictions about changes that will take place from one stage of succession to another.
The evolution of a body of water from a lake to a marsh can last for thousands of years.
The process cannot be observed directly. Instead, a method can be used to find the links of
stages and then to put them together to develop a complete story.
The water level of Lake Michigan was once 18 meters higher than it is today. As the
water level fell, land was exposed. Many small lakes or ponds were left behind where there
were depressions in the land. Below are illustrations and descriptions of four ponds as they
exist today. Use the illustrations and descriptions to answer the questions about the ponds.
Pond A:
Cattails, bulrushes, and water lilies grow in the pond. These plants have their roots in the
bottom of the pond, but they can reach above the surface of the water. This pond is an ideal
habitat for the animals that must climb to the surface for oxygen. Aquatic insect larvae are
1 abundant. They serve as food for larger insects, which in turn are food for crayfish, frogs,
salamanders, and turtles.
Pond B:
Plankton growth is rich enough to support animals that entered when the pond was connected to
the lake. Fish make nests on the sandy bottom. Mussels crawl over the bottom.
Pond C:
Decayed bodies of plants and animals form a layer of humus over the bottom of the pond.
Chara, branching green algae, covers the humus. Fish that build nests on the bare bottom have
been replaced by those that lay their eggs on the Chara.
Pond D:
The pond is so filled with vegetation that there are no longer any large areas of open water.
Instead, the pond is filled with grasses. The water dries up during the summer months.
Questions:
1. Write the letters of the ponds in order from the youngest, to the oldest.
B,c,a,d
2. Black bass and bluegill make their nests on sandy bottoms. In which pond would you find
them?
b
3. What will happen to the black bass and blue gill as the floor of the ponds fills with organic
debris? Their populations will drop and eventually will disappear from this pond
4. Golden shiner and mud minnows lay their eggs on Chara (green algae). In which pond would
you find them? C
5. Some amphibians and crayfish can withstand periods of dryness by burying themselves in
mud. In which pond(s) would they survive? D
6. Dragonfly nymphs spend their early stages clinging to submerged plants. Then, they climb to
the surface, shed their skins, and fly away as dragonflies. Which pond is best suited for
dragonflies? A
2 7. In which pond will gill breathing snails be replaced by lung breathing snails that climb to the
surface to breathe? A
8. Some mussels require a sandy bottom in order to maintain an upright position. In which pond
will they die out? A, C, and D
The climax community in the area of Arkansas is an oak-hickory forest. After the ponds are
filled in, the area will undergo another series of stages of succession. This is illustrated
below. Briefly explain what is happening in the diagram.
1. Grasses and many annual plants grow
2. perennial herbaceous plants replace grasses and annuals. Small shrubs begin to grow
3. Shrubs continue to grow and reduce the number of grasses and herbaceous plants, small
deciduous trees begin to grow
4. Pine trees replace much of the shrubs. Little grass can grow in the shade of the larger trees.
Deciduous trees (oak and hickory) continue to grow
5. Most of the pine trees have been replaced with mature hickory and oak trees
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