Ecosystem Change Over Time
- Junessa Masaya
- Apr 15
- 4 min read
HSC Biology | Free Study Notes
In this lesson
what extinction means
how environmental change affects ecosystems
how species replacement can happen
what long-term trends in ecosystems look like
why ecosystem change over time matters in Module 4
Why ecosystems change
Ecosystems are not fixed. They change over time as abiotic and biotic conditions change.
These changes may happen:
over short time periods, such as after drought, fire or disease
over long time periods, such as climate shifts, geological change or long-term species turnover
The syllabus specifically links past ecosystem change to changes in biotic and abiotic factors over short and long periods of time.
Extinction
Extinction is the complete disappearance of a species.
A species is extinct when no living individuals remain.
Why extinction happens
Extinction can happen when a species cannot survive changing conditions, such as:
loss of habitat
major climate change
new predators or competitors
disease
human activity
Why extinction matters in ecosystems
When one species becomes extinct:
ecological niches may become empty
other species may decline or increase
Module 4 specifically includes investigating a recent extinction event and also the role of human-induced selection pressures in extinction.
Environmental change
Environmental change means a change in the conditions of an ecosystem.
Abiotic environmental change
Abiotic changes may include:
temperature shifts
rainfall changes
sea level change
volcanic activity
changes in atmospheric gases
Biotic environmental change
Biotic changes may include:
arrival of a new predator
spread of disease
decline of a food source
increase or decrease of a competing species
Why environmental change matters
Environmental change can alter:
which species can survive
how abundant species are
which adaptations are favoured
the overall structure of the ecosystem
Species replacement
Species replacement happens when one species declines or disappears and another
species becomes more common in its place.
How species replacement can happen
Species replacement may occur when:
environmental conditions favour a different species
one species becomes extinct
a new species enters the ecosystem
selection pressures change over time
Why this matters
Species replacement shows that ecosystems are dynamic. As conditions change, the dominant species in an area may also change.
Example idea
If a cooler, wetter environment becomes hotter and drier over a long time, plant species adapted to moist conditions may decline and be replaced by species better adapted to dry conditions.
Long-term trends
A long-term trend is a general pattern of change that happens over extended periods of time.
What long-term trends may include
In ecosystems, long-term trends may include:
gradual climate change
long-term vegetation change
repeated decline of certain species
slow replacement of communities
increasing or decreasing biodiversity over time
Why long-term trends matter
Long-term trends help scientists understand:
how ecosystems respond to changing conditions
whether changes are temporary or lasting
how past change may help predict future change
This is why Module 4 links past ecosystem change to future ecosystem management.
How ecosystem change can be explained
When explaining ecosystem change over time, students should link:
the environmental change
the effect on organisms
the resulting change in biodiversity or ecosystem structure
Simple pattern
Conditions change.
Some species are less suited to the new conditions.
Their abundance decreases, or they become extinct.
Other species become more successful.
The ecosystem changes over time.
Extinction, replacement and long-term trends together
These ideas are closely linked.
Example
A long period of drying climate may:
reduce the abundance of moisture-dependent plants
lower food availability for animals that depend on them
cause local extinction of some species
allow drier-habitat species to replace them
This shows how environmental change can drive extinction and species replacement across long time periods.
Human impacts on ecosystem change
Humans can speed up ecosystem change through:
land clearing
pollution
introduced species
altered fire regimes
climate change
The Module 4 syllabus specifically includes the role of human-induced selection pressures on the extinction of species.
Why this matters
Human activity can make ecosystem change happen faster than many species can adapt.
Why this topic matters in Module 4
This topic helps students understand that ecosystems are shaped by both past and present pressures. It connects directly to:
past ecosystem evidence
extinction
biodiversity change
future ecosystem management
That makes it one of the key “big picture” ideas in Module 4.
Worked example
Exam-style question
Explain how environmental change can lead to species replacement in an ecosystem.
Worked answer
Environmental change can alter the conditions in an ecosystem, such as temperature, rainfall or food availability. If one species is poorly adapted to the new conditions, its population may decline. A different species that is better adapted may survive and reproduce more successfully, becoming more common in the ecosystem. Over time, this leads to species replacement.
Why this works
This answer:
starts with environmental change
links it to survival and reproduction
explains how one species declines and another becomes dominant
Common mistakes
Treating extinction and species replacement as the same thing.
Describing environmental change without explaining its effect on organisms.
Forgetting that ecosystem change can happen over both short and long time periods.
Assuming all change is caused by humans.
Listing long-term trends without linking them to biodiversity or species survival.
Quick quiz
What is extinction?
What is environmental change in an ecosystem?
What is species replacement?
What is a long-term trend?
Why can past ecosystem change help guide future ecosystem management?

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