serals
Serals are successive ecological communities that develop during ecological succession after a disturbance or the creation of new habitat. A seral stage refers to a distinct, transitional community that differs in species composition and structure from both its predecessors and its eventual climax community. The term seral and its plural serals are used to describe the series of communities that may arise over time as environments recover or change.
Disturbances such as fire, flood, landslides, harvesting, or glacial retreat initiate seral sequences. The progression is
Common seral sequences often include pioneer or early-seral stages (grasses, forbs, annuals), intermediate stages (shrubs, young
Critics note that the classic ladder-like view of seral progression oversimplifies ecological dynamics. Modern ecology emphasizes
See also: ecological succession, pioneer species, climax community, secondary succession, disturbance ecology.