Generally secondary succession will take place. Since even though much of the vegetation may be destroyed the soil and some buried seeds mostly remain in place.
The five stages a tornado goes through are: The dust whirl stage, when the circulation first touches the ground The organizing stage, in which the tornado grows and intensifies The mature stage. when the tornado is at its largest and typically strongest The shrinking stage in which the tornado begins to lose strength The rope out stage in which the vortex decays and finally dissipates, often twisting and bending as it does so. Of these stages the mature stage is usually the most destructive.
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The 4 stages are:The organizing stage where the tornado touches down and intensifies.The mature state when the tornado is at its largest and usually its strongest.The shrinking stage in which a tornado begins to lose energy.The rope stage where a tornado starts to break up.
No, because it takes around one hundred to two hundred years for all the stages of secondary succession to take place.
There are five stages to which a tornado typically goes through through. Tornadoes are formed during the mature stage of a supercell under the right conditions. The first stage of a tornadoes life cycle is called the "Dust Whirl stage." This stage occurs when a wall cloud or any other type of rotation above, whips up dirt, dust, leaves, grass, etc. The second stage is called the "Organization stage." This stage is important to the tornado's life cycle because it is able to improve the structure, hence increasing wind speed and velocity, and volume. The third stage of a tornado's life cycle is called the "Mature stage." This stage is when the tornado has typically reached it's greatest, strength, size, wind speed, and maturity. The forth stage is called the "Disipating stage." During this stage, the tornado begins to weaken, shrink, and lose its structure. Though in some cases tornadoes may intensify as they shrink The Final stage of the tornado's life cycle is called the "Rope stage." The rope stage happens when the tornado literally has little TO NO STRUCTURE AT ALL. The tornado twists and turns, bends and winds, in all types of shapes and directions.However, this is concept is somewhat idealized. Not all tornadoes go through these five stages as described.
The succession stages differ from primary succession as the stages are nothing more than mere points of succession. Meanwhile, primary succession is considered to be a complete success and not just a point in success.
primary succession, ecological succession, substrate, and secondary succession
the stages of secondary succession are very similar to the stages of primary succession, except that soil already exists in the area
primary secondary pioneer climax community
developing, mature, dissipating
Yes
The five stages a tornado goes through are: The dust whirl stage, when the circulation first touches the ground The organizing stage, in which the tornado grows and intensifies The mature stage. when the tornado is at its largest and typically strongest The shrinking stage in which the tornado begins to lose strength The rope out stage in which the vortex decays and finally dissipates, often twisting and bending as it does so. Of these stages the mature stage is usually the most destructive.
they become more complex and specialized
1
The four stages of succession that occur after a glacier recedes are lichens, mosses, grasses, and trees. Each stage building upon the last.
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The succerssor to the president would be the Vice President. Below that are the other stages of government.