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Science 7
Chapters

1Science Practices and Indigenous Knowledge in Context

2Ecosystems: Structure, Function, and Biodiversity

3Populations, Communities, Food Chains and Webs

4Biogeochemical Cycles: Water, Carbon, and Nitrogen

5Ecosystem Change: Disturbance, Succession, and Resilience

Disturbance Regimes and ScalesNatural Events: Fire, Flood, DroughtCatastrophic versus Gradual ChangePrimary and Secondary SuccessionPioneer Species and Climax ConceptsIndigenous Fire StewardshipAdaptations to DisturbanceEdge Effects and FragmentationEcological Resilience and ResistanceFeedback Loops and ThresholdsRestoration Ecology PrinciplesMonitoring Ecosystem RecoveryCase Study: Prairie SuccessionCase Study: Wetland RestorationPredicting Change with Models

6Human Impacts, Sustainability, and Stewardship

7Particle Theory, Matter, Pure Substances and Mixtures

8Separating Mixtures and Solutions: Methods and Impacts

9Solutions: Solubility, Concentration, and Applications

10Heat, Temperature, and States of Matter

11Heat Transfer: Conduction, Convection, Radiation, Technologies

12Earth's Crust: Plate Tectonics and Geological Events

13Geological Resources, Surface Geology, and Saskatchewan Soils

Courses/Science 7/Ecosystem Change: Disturbance, Succession, and Resilience

Ecosystem Change: Disturbance, Succession, and Resilience

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Explore how ecosystems change through natural and human-driven disturbances and how resilience develops over time.

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Disturbance Regimes and Scales

Disturbance Regimes and Scales Explained for Science 7
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Disturbance Regimes and Scales Explained for Science 7

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Disturbance Regimes and Scales — the Ecosystem's Remix

Building on what you learned about the water, carbon, and nitrogen cycles, we now ask: what happens to those cycles when ecosystems get a dramatic remix? Disturbances change how matter moves, how energy flows, and how soil microbes run the nutrient show.


Hook: Imagine your backyard turned into a playlist

You know how a playlist can be chill, then suddenly a bass-drop ruins your tea-sip? Ecosystems have playlists too — disturbance regimes are the patterns of those bass-drops. Some ecosystems get one-off shocks (a surprise bass-drop), others get slow, steady volume increases (a ramp), and some are in a constant loop of beats (frequent fires, storms, or floods).

This lesson skips the basics of carbon, water, and nitrogen cycling (you already covered that) and asks: How do disturbances — their timing, size, and strength — change those cycles and the life that depends on them? Spoiler: big effects often start small, like microbes freaking out when the soil changes.


What is a disturbance regime?

  • Disturbance: an event that changes ecosystem structure, the availability of resources, or the physical environment (e.g., fire, flood, hurricane, pest outbreak, logging).
  • Regime: the pattern of disturbances over space and time — frequency, intensity, type, and extent.

Put together: a disturbance regime describes the typical when, how often, how big, and how intense disturbances are in a place.

Why it matters

  • It sets the stage for succession (which species come back first and which come later).
  • It controls resilience: whether an ecosystem resists change or recovers quickly.
  • It alters biogeochemical cycles: fires release carbon; floods change nitrogen loss; droughts slow water-driven transport.

Key dimensions of disturbance regimes

Think of these like knobs you can turn — each one changes the ecosystem's response.

  1. Frequency / Return interval

    • How often does a disturbance happen? Annual? Once per century? Every 20 years?
    • Example: Some grasslands burn every few years; old-growth forests may go centuries without big fires.
  2. Intensity / Severity

    • How strong is the disturbance? Does it scorch the topsoil or just trim leaves?
    • Ecological effect matters more than just energy: a low-intensity fire that leaves roots intact vs a high-intensity one that sterilizes soil.
  3. Spatial extent (scale)

    • Small patch vs landscape-wide event.
    • Example: A tree falling affects a patch; a hurricane alters hundreds of hectares.
  4. Duration and rate (pulse vs press vs ramp)

    • Pulse: short, discrete event (lightning-caused wildfire).
    • Press: continuous pressure (long-term grazing, chronic pollution).
    • Ramp: slowly changing pressure that accelerates (progressive drought intensifying over decades).
  5. Timing and seasonality

    • Disturbance in the growing season vs dormant season can have very different outcomes.

Quick table: Pulse | Press | Ramp

Type Example Ecological signature
Pulse Lightning wildfire Fast change, then recovery or succession
Press Continuous grazing Ongoing suppression of certain species
Ramp Gradual climate warming Slow shifts, possible tipping points

Real-world examples and links to cycles

  • Wildfire (pulse, high intensity or low)

    • Carbon: instantly releases stored carbon to atmosphere, changing local carbon budgets.
    • Water: loss of canopy increases runoff and erosion; ash can change water chemistry.
    • Nitrogen: volatilization and loss; altered soil microbes reduce nutrient cycling efficiency.
  • Prolonged drought (ramp)

    • Water: less transpiration, lower streamflow, changed groundwater recharge.
    • Carbon: plant stress reduces photosynthesis → less carbon uptake.
    • Microbes: drought shifts microbial communities toward drought-tolerant taxa; affects decomposition.
  • Flooding (pulse; sometimes press in managed systems)

    • Nitrogen: denitrification can spike, releasing N2O or N2 — changing nitrogen budgets and greenhouse gas emissions.
    • Soil microbes: anaerobic conditions favor different microbe groups, altering nutrient transformations.
  • Pest outbreaks (pulse or press depending on persistence)

    • Change plant community composition; can lead to increased dead biomass and altered fire regimes.

How disturbance regimes affect succession and resilience

  • Succession pathway depends on the regime: frequent low-intensity fires favor fire-tolerant grasses and shrubs; infrequent high-intensity fires favor species that need a long recovery time.
  • Resilience has two parts:
    • Resistance — how much the ecosystem changes when disturbed.
    • Recovery — how fast and to what state it returns.

Ecosystems can shift to alternative stable states if disturbance regimes change enough (e.g., repeated severe fires converting forests to shrublands). That's when the playlist changes so much you can't get the old song back.


How scientists describe a disturbance regime (practical checklist)

  1. Record what happened (type of disturbance).
  2. Measure when and how often (frequency / return interval).
  3. Estimate how big (spatial extent) and how strong (intensity/severity).
  4. Note duration and season.
  5. Track key ecosystem responses: plant community, soil microbes, carbon/nitrogen fluxes, water flow.

This is how managers and ecologists decide if a system is still functioning or sliding toward a new state.


Why this matters for humans and climate

  • Disturbance regimes are changing with climate change and land use: fires are more frequent and intense in many places, storms are stronger, droughts are longer.
  • These changes feed back into biogeochemical cycles and climate: more carbon released, altered nitrogen fluxes, changed water storage — which in turn affects human water supplies, agriculture, and biodiversity.

"This is the moment where the concept finally clicks." — when you see disturbance regimes as the rhythm that controls how matter and energy move through ecosystems.


Key takeaways (so you can flex this on a quiz)

  • Disturbance regime = the pattern of disturbances (frequency, intensity, scale, type, timing).
  • Disturbances reshape succession, resilience, and biogeochemical cycles (water, carbon, nitrogen) — remember your earlier lessons on how those cycles move through ecosystems.
  • Types: pulse, press, and ramp — each produces different ecological responses.
  • Changing disturbance regimes (from climate or humans) can produce regime shifts and new stable states.

Final memorable image

Think of an ecosystem like a cake: biogeochemical cycles are the ingredients, species are the frosting and layers, and disturbance regimes are the oven settings. Change the temperature, timing, or settings enough, and you don't have the same cake anymore — you have something else. Sometimes it's still tasty. Sometimes it's a brûlée gone wrong.

Go outside, notice a burned patch, a flooded field, or a stand of trees with beetle damage — ask: what's the regime here and how will the cycles I learned about change next?


Questions to ponder

  • Why do some ecosystems need disturbance (e.g., some seeds need fire to germinate)?
  • How might changing disturbance regimes alter the carbon budget of a forest you know?
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