Meaning Succession
What does Succession mean? Here you find 50 meanings of the word Succession. You can also add a definition of Succession yourself

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Succession


n. the statutory rules of inheritance of a dead person's estate w...
Source: dictionary.law.com

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Succession


See Ecological succession.
Source: phschool.com

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Succession


The process of vegetational development whereby an area becomes successively occupied by different plant communities of higher ecological order. 
Source: nwcg.gov

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Succession


1[countable, usually singular] a number of people or things that follow each other in time or order synonym series a succession of visitors He's been hit by a succession of injuries since he join [..]
Source: oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com

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Succession


early 14c., "fact or right of succeeding someone by inheritance," from Old French succession "inheritance; a following on" (13c.), from Latin successionem (nominative successio) &q [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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Succession


The passing of property or legal rights after death. The word commonly refers to the distribution of property under a states intestate succession laws, which determine who inherits property when someo [..]
Source: nolo.com

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Succession


The progression of a plant community to a stable mixture of plants.
Source: atlantishydroponics.com

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Succession


the gradual replacement of one plant community by another. Brought about by changes in climate, in environment, or in the community (climatic succession, physiographic succession, biotic succession), and most frequently by erosion, dropping water levels, or invasion by another species.
Source: terrapsych.com

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Succession


sequence: a following of one thing after another in time; "the doctor saw a sequence of patients" a group of people or things arranged or following in order; "a [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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Succession


the development of a plant community over time.
Source: itseducation.asia

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Succession


the gradual replacement, through time, of one group of species in a community by other groups succulent
Source: mhhe.com

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Succession


A French word for a document that shows the division of a deceased person's property among heirs. Also called partage.
Source: familysearch.org

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Succession


nokhanandikeyt
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com

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Succession


1 a : the order in which or the conditions under which one person after another succeeds to a property, dignity, position, title, or throne [the sequence of to the presidency] b : the right of a ...
Source: dictionary.findlaw.com

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Succession


A sequence of events coming one after the other in time; ecological succession refers to a more or less predictable change in the structure of an ecological community
Source: conservewildlifenj.org

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Succession


Sequential change in the plant population of an area through time.
Source: felpress.co.uk

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Succession


(L: sub= under/close to/ toward; cedere= to yield/go) alternating populations of life forms after a large disturbance in the ecosystem. Fast growing organisms (opportunists like weeds), also reproduce [..]
Source: seafriends.org.nz

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Succession


change to an ecosystem, often after an environmental change
Source: ontrack-media.net

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Succession


A term derived from the study of plants and animals used by the Chicago School of human ecology to refer to the process whereby a new social group begins to dominate a residential district after initi [..]
Source: thebicyclingguitarist.net

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Succession


progressive replacement, on a single site, of one type of community by another. summer solstice -
Source: alanpedia.com

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Succession


the natural time-order of rocks or fossils
Source: gns.cri.nz

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Succession


Succession, in general, means following another. In legal parlance it means succeeding to the rights of another, as where a new corporation which is a reorganization of another corporation takes the r [..]
Source: definitions.uslegal.com

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Succession


(n) a following of one thing after another in time(n) a group of people or things arranged or following in order(n) the action of following in order(n) (ecology) the gradual and orderly process of cha [..]
Source: beedictionary.com

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Succession


A predictable ordering of a dominance of a species or groups of species following the opening of an environment to biological colonization
Source: otlibrary.com

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Succession


A series of dynamic changes by which Organisms succeed one another through a series of plant community (seral) stages leading to potential natural community or climax.
Source: oak.snr.missouri.edu

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Succession


With respect to forest development, succession refers to the changes over time as a forest proceeds from one developmental stage to the next: thus early-successional stands describe stands in the year [..]
Source: graphiccommunications.com

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Succession


Changes that occur in vegetation as bare ground is progressively colonised by different species, ending in climax vegetation.
Source: forestry.gov.uk

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Succession


Sequence of plant communities that occur after disturbance (like clear cutting of trees or farming), and end in the region's dominant habitat type.
Source: sialis.org

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Succession


"An orderly process of community development that is reasonably directional and, therefore, predictable [that] culminates in a stabilized ecosystem" (Eugene Odum, cited in Botkin, 54). "A term perhaps first used by Thomas Pownall in 1784 ... and reintroduced in 1860 by Thoreau to describe the development of pine woodlands following t [..]
Source: alpha.fdu.edu

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Succession


Succession is the change from one community type to another. This can be seen where, for example, an agricultural field changes from an open meadow into a shrub land and, if left untouched, eventually [..]
Source: natureconservancy.ca

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Succession


The natural replacement, in time, of one plant community with another. Conditions of the prior plant community (or successional stage) create conditions that are favorable for the establishment of the [..]
Source: pursuetheoutdoors.com

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Succession


the gradual and orderly process of change in an ecosystem brought about by the progressive replacement of one community by another until a stable climax is established
Source: kerbtier.de

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Succession


The more or less predictable changes in the composition of communities following a natural or human disturbance.
Source: aboutbioscience.org

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Succession


in all natural environments a dominant species is replaced by another. Example: weeds, grass, shrubs, trees. Example 2: molds (sugar eating), mushrooms (cellulose eating).
Source: disknet.com

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Succession


Process in which communities of plant and animal species in a particular area are replaced over time by a series of different and usually more complex communities. There are two types of succession: primary and secondary. Primary succession occurs in a bare area that has never been occupied by a community of organisms (for example, on a newly-coole [..]
Source: hubbardbrook.org

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Succession


The process by which a plant or animal community successively gives way to another until a stable state is reached.
Source: chesapeakebay.net

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Succession


A term used to describe the body of law relating to the passing of property on the death of a person
Source: probatelawyers.com.au

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Succession


The progression of a plant community to a stable mixture of plants.
Source: growershouse.com

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Succession


The orderly process of change over time in an ecosystem where an early pioneering community is replaced by another until a stable 'climax' community is reached Symbiosis
Source: agric.gov.ab.ca

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Succession


The replacement of one community by another as a result of changes in the environment.
Source: web.deu.edu.tr

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Succession


The directional and continuous pattern of colonization and extinction on a site by populations.
Source: bluemountain1.net

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Succession


lang=en 1800s=1818 * '''1818''' — . ''''. *: Nothing is more painful to the human mind than, after the feelings have been worked up by a quick succession of events, the dead calmness of inaction an [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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Succession


The gradual and orderly process of ecosystem development brought about by changes in community composition.
Source: rgs.org

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Succession


the passing of real property by inheritance or will; abbreviated as "succ" tax -
Source: tangiassessor.com

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Succession


The replacement of one plant community by another over time.
Source: forestasyst.org

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Succession


A process of community-level recovery following disturbance.
Source: celp.ca

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Succession


Succession is the act or process of following in order or sequence.
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Succession


In geology, a succession is a series of strata or rock units in chronological order. Rock successions can be seen in cross sections through rock, for example in a road cut or cliff. With sedimentary l [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Succession


"Succession" is the thirteenth episode of NBC's second season of 30 Rock and the thirty-fourth episode overall. It was written by Andrew Guest and one of the seasons' co-executive producers, John Rigg [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Succession


Succession is the act or process of following in order or sequence.
Source: en.wikipedia.org





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