METHOD OF NATURAL HABITATS

357. Natural experiments. Every family as well as every community constitutes an experiment in competition; the same statement necessarily holds for the larger groups, society, consocies, and formation, which are composed of families and communities. The last also make it possible to study competition in two typical instances, viz., in the family, where the individuals are of one kind, and in the community, where they belong to two or more different species. The community, moreover, is a product of invasion, and it furnishes material for the study of this function, as well as for that of aggregation and competition. Practically every formation shows some invasion, but as a rule stable formations contain so few invaders that they are relatively unimportant in this connection. Invasion is most active in transition areas and in mixed formations, whether produced by juxtaposition or by succession, and its study in these places yields by far the largest number of valuable results.

As typical complete invasion, a succession is the best of all natural experiments in aggregation, migration, ecesis, and competition. This is especially true of the initial stages in which changes in the number and position are most readily followed. The methods used in studying successions have been given elsewhere. In addition, it should be pointed out that one of the first tasks in taking up the ecological investigation of a region is to make a careful search for all new and denuded areas, as well as for those in which succession is taking place. The phenomena in these areas can not be explained until the habitats and formations have been worked over critically, but the facts must be collected at the earliest possible moment, since the stages of the succession are constantly changing, while the stable formations are not.