 | Succession: Encyclopedia - Succession
Succession
Succession is the act or process of following in order or sequence. (It is not to be confused with secession, the act of withdrawing from an organization, union, or political entity.)
Succession - Political succession
Belgium
Denmark
Ethiopia
Japan
Monaco
Netherlands
Norway
Spain
Sweden
Liechtenstein
United Kingdom
France
United States
In politics, succession is the ascension to power by one politician or monarch after another, usually in a clearly defined order.
For more information on specific succession procedures, see:
- Order of succession (royal)
- Line of succession to the British Throne
- See also: Act of Settlement 1701
- Line of succession to the Norwegian Throne
- Line of succession to the Swedish throne
- Line of succession to the Danish throne
- Line of succession to the Monegasque Throne
- Line of succession to the Dutch Throne
- List of Succession to the Belgian Throne
- Line of succession to the Spanish Throne
- Presidential Succession Act (United States)
- United States presidential line of succession
- Succession planning (corporate)
In ecology, succession is the replacement of one biological community by another. Succession can be primary or secondary. Primary succession occurs on essentially new substrata: bare rock or soil that has never been colonized before. Examples would be sand dunes and lava flows. Secondary succession occurs on land that has been colonized before, but has been disturbed back to some earlier state. Examples would include a drained reservoir, cleared forest, or ploughed field. Succession begins with arrival of the pioneer species and leads eventually to establishment of a climax community. In primary successions, pioneer species are typically hardy plants that survive under harsh conditions. On English sand dunes, marram grass has deep roots to tap into the water table, rhizomes to bind the soil, and leaves that reduce water loss through transpiration. On lava flows, the first plants to colonize are adapted to survive in thin or no soils and possibly little water. The pioneer plants add organic matter to the soil, and help bind soil particles together, eventually allowing other species to colonize the area. This process slowly enhances the soil quality, enabling a sequence of other species assemblages to survive until a climax community is established. Climax communities are those communities of plants, animals, fungi, etc. that will be able to replace themselves with new generations of the same species. The climax community of an area is determined by the characteristics of an area, such as elevation, soil type, and amount of rainfall. The climax communities most people are familiar with are usually some form of woodland that comes in after a field is abandoned.
Succession - Musical succession
In music or musical set theory, a succession is a series of any musical parameters including pitches, pitch classes, or simultaneities (see simultaneity succession). Succession may be thought of as a more general term for any possible progression, as in chord progression or harmonic progression, though not all simultaneity successions are harmonic progressions.
Succession - Ecological succession
Ecological succession is the change in the types species of an ecological community observed over time.
Succession - Apostolic succession
Apostolic Succession is the lineage from the apostles to current bishops. The Roman Catholic Church is often claimed to be the only Christian church with valid Apostolic succession and many Protestant Churches do not claim it.
Other related archivesAct of Settlement 1701, Apostolic Succession, Belgium, Denmark, Ecological succession, Ethiopia, France, Japan, Liechtenstein, Line of succession to the British Throne, Line of succession to the Danish throne, Line of succession to the Dutch Throne, Line of succession to the Monegasque Throne, Line of succession to the Norwegian Throne, Line of succession to the Spanish Throne, Line of succession to the Swedish throne, List of Succession to the Belgian Throne, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Order of succession, Presidential Succession Act, Spain, Succession planning, Sweden, United Kingdom, United States, United States presidential line of succession, chord progression, ecological community, harmonic, monarch, music, musical set theory, pitch classes, pitches, politician, politics, secession, simultaneities, simultaneity succession
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