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Origins
- Today's old-growth
forests started hundreds of years ago after some kind of catastrophic
change-perhaps a large forest fire or windstorm--destroyed the previous
forest.
- But change is
a normal part of all ecosystems, including old-growth forests. Small
changes go on all the time. A snag falls over, or an animal is born.
Bigger changes such as fires, windstorms, or insects kill some trees
and create openings in the forest where new trees can grow, adding to
the complexity of the forest.
- Three qualities
are important when an ecosystem responds to changes--species, forest
structures, and processes.
- Species--The
complexity of the old-growth forest creates many habitats. These
habitats support thousands of species, including soil arthropods,
spiders, insects, mites, millipedes, lichen, fungi, mosses, small
mammals, and bats. This high level of biodiversity means that many
species carry out each ecological process.
- Forest structures--A
forest has live and dead structures. The structures left after a
disturbance are called biological legacies. After a fire or windstorm,
the dead trees become snags or fallen trees on the ground. These
dead trees shelter many plants and animals, protect the soil, and
enrich the soil as they decay. Biological legacies ensure that many
species survive a fire or other disturbance, and the legacies help
rebuild the ecosystem.
- Processes--Forests
are changing all the time, they are dynamic. Forests continue their
ecological processes through all the changes, a quality known as
resilience. Click on the heading "processes"
to learn more about them.
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