Secondary succession follows tornadoes, if there is any succession. Tornadoes can bring down many trees and damage vegetation, but they generally leave the soil intact.
Yes. A violent enough tornado can completely remove vegetation from an area, especially trees. Such destruction leads to secondary succession.
Any of these can cause succession. Tornadoes, hurricanes, and farming would result in secondary succession. Mining would result in primary succession. A volcanic eruption could result in either depending on whether or not the soil was destroyed or covered by lava flows.
Some examples can be like hurricanes and tornadoes by: NN
primary succession
primary succession
Tornadoes cause secondary succession. They destroy vegetation but leave most of the soil and some seeds in place.
Yes. A violent enough tornado can completely remove vegetation from an area, especially trees. Such destruction leads to secondary succession.
Any of these can cause succession. Tornadoes, hurricanes, and farming would result in secondary succession. Mining would result in primary succession. A volcanic eruption could result in either depending on whether or not the soil was destroyed or covered by lava flows.
Presidential succession is the order in which one person follows another chronologically in the Office of the President.
Some examples can be like hurricanes and tornadoes by: NN
primary succession
The gradual change in living communities that follows a disturbance is called succession. Secondary succession is the sequence of community change that takes place when a community is disrupted by natural disaster or human actions.
A group of tornadoes produced by the same storm system withing a day or so is called a tornado outbreak. A series of tornadoes produced in succession by the same supercell is called a tornado family.
Speaker of a house.
A disturbance can alter an ecosystem dramatically. If the species living there don't adapt, they can die and stop living within that ecosystem, which will further disturb it and change it forever.
primary succession
Tornadoes usually form from a type of thunderstorm called a supercell. Tornadoes themselves are a unique type of windstorm.