Climax community
Community (ecology), Ecological succession, Frederic Clements, Ontogeny, Arthur Tansley
978-613-7-47389-4
6137473899
56
2011-10-17
29.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. In ecology, a climax community, or climatic climax community, is a biological community of plants and animals which, through the process of ecological succession — the development of vegetation in an area over time — has reached a steady state. This equilibrium occurs because the climax community is composed of species best adapted to average conditions in that area. The term is sometimes also applied in soil development. The idea of a single climatic climax, which is defined in relation to regional climate, originated with Frederic Clements in the early 1900s. The first analysis of succession as leading to something like a climax was written by Henry Cowles in 1899, but it was Clements who used the term "climax" to describe the idealized endpoint of succession.
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