The scale of disturbance ranges from events as small as a single tree falling, to as large as a mass extinction. Many natural ecosystems experience periodic disturbance that may broadly fall into a cyclical pattern. Ecosystems that form under these conditions are often maintained by regular disturbance. Wetland ecosystems, for example, can be maintained by the movement of water through them and by periodic fires. Different types of disturbance events occur in different habitats and
climates with different weather conditions.
Wildfires,
droughts,
floods, disease outbreaks, changes in
hydrology,
tornadoes and other extreme weather, landslides, and windstorms are all examples of natural disturbance events that may form a cyclical or periodic pattern over time. Other disturbances, such as those caused by humans, invasive species or impact events, can occur anywhere and are not necessarily cyclic. These disturbances can alter the trajectory of change within an ecosystem permanently.
Extinction vortices may result in multiple disturbances or a greater frequency of a single disturbance.
Anthropogenic disturbance Logging, dredging, conversion of land to ranching or
agriculture, mowing, and mining are examples of anthropogenic disturbance. Human activities have introduced disturbances into ecosystems worldwide on a large scale, resulting in widespread range expansion and rapid evolution of disturbance-adapted species. Agricultural practices create novel ecosystems, known as
agroecosystems, which are colonized by plant species adapted to disturbance and enforce
evolutionary pressure upon those species. Species adapted to anthropogenic disturbance are often known as
weeds. Another example of anthropogenic disturbance is
controlled burns used by Native Americans to maintain fire-dependent ecosystems. These disturbances helped maintain stability and biodiversity in ecosystems, enhancing overall ecosystem health and functioning. Anthropogenic
climate change is considered a major source of change in future successional trajectories of ecosystems. == Effects ==