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Halosere

 
 
(′hal·ə′sir)

(ecology) The series of communities succeeding one another, from the pioneer stage to the climax, and commencing in salt water or on saline soil.


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Wikipedia: Halosere
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A salt marsh.

The term Halosere is an ecological term which describes succession in a saline environment. An example of a halosere would be a salt marsh.

In river estuaries, large amounts of silt are deposited by the ebbing tides and inflowing rivers.

The earliest plant colonizers are algae and eel grass which can tolerate submergence by the tide for most of the 12-hour cycle and which trap mud, causing it to accumulate. Two other colonisers are salicornia and spartina which are halophytes -i.e. plants that can tolerate saline conditions. They grow on the inter-tidal mudflats with a maximum of 4 hours' and exposure to air every 12 hours.

Spartina has long roots enabling it to trap more mud than the initial conlonizing plants and salicornia, and so on. In most places this becomes dominant vegetation. The initial tidal flats receive new sediments daily, are waterlogged to the exclusion of oxygen, and have a high pH value.

The sward zone, in contrast, is inhabited by plants that can only tolerate a maximum of 4 hours submergence everyday (24 hours). The dominant species here are sea lavender and other numerous types of grasses.


 
 
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Seral community
Coastal management
Ecological succession

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Sci-Tech Dictionary. McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms. Copyright © 2003, 1994, 1989, 1984, 1978, 1976, 1974 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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