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CHAPTER 6 - KINDS OF ECOSYSTEMS AND COMMUNITIES

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Answer
succession   regular and predictable changes in the structure of a community, ultimately leading to a climax community  
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climax community   last stage of succession; a relatively stable, long-lasting, complex, and interrelated community of plants, animals, fungi and bacteria  
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primary succession   succession that begins with bare mineral surfaces or water  
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secondary succession   succession that begins with the destruction or disturbance of an existing ecosystem  
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pioneer community   the early stages of succession that begin the soil-building process  
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successional stage   a stage in succession  
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sere   a stage in succession  
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biomes   a kind of plant and animal community that covers large geographic areas. Climate is a major determiner of the biome found in a particular area  
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desert   a biome that receives less than 25 centimeters (10 inches) of precipitation per year  
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temperate grasslands   areas receiving between 25 and 75 centimeters (10-30 inches) or precipitation per year. Grasses are the dominant vegetation, and trees are rare  
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steppe   a grassland  
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prairies   temperate grasslands  
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savannas   tropical biome having seasonal rainfall of 50 to 150 centimeters (20-60 inches) per year. The dominate plants are grasses, with some scattered fire- and drought-resistant trees  
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mediterranean shrublands   coastal ecosystems characterized by winter rains and summer droughts that are dominated by low, woody vegetation with small leaves  
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tropical dry forest   regions that receive low rain amounts, as little as 50 centimeters (20 inches) per year, and are characterized by species well adapted to drought. Trees of dry tropical forests are usually smaller than those in rainforests, and many lose their leaves duri  
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temperate deciduous forest   biome that has a winter-summer change of seasons and that typically receives 75 to 150c centimeters (30-60 inches) or more of relatively evenly distributed precipitation throughout the year  
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taiga   biome having short, cool summers and long winters with abundant snowfall. The trees are adapted to winter conditions  
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boreal forest (northern coniferous forest)   a broad band of mixed coniferous and deciduous trees that stretches across northern North America (and also Europe and Asia); its northernmost edge is integrated with the Arctic tundra  
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alpine tundra   the biome that exists above the tree line in mountainous regions  
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freshwater ecosystem   aquatic ecosystems that have low amounts of dissolved salts  
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marine ecosystem   aquatic ecosystems that have high salt content  
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pelagic   those organisms that swim in open water  
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pelagic ecosystem   a portion of a marine or freshwater ecosystem that occurs in open water away from the shore  
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plankton   tiny aquatic organisms that are moved by tides and currents  
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phytoplankton   free-floating, microscopic, chlorophyll-containing organisms  
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zooplankton   weakly swimming microscopic animals  
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eurphotic zone   the upper layer in the ocean where the sun’s rays penetrate  
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benthic   describe organisms that live on the bottom of marine and freshwater ecosystems  
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benthic ecosystem   a type of marine or freshwater ecosystem consisting of organisms that live on the bottom  
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coral reef ecosystem   a tropical, shallow-water, marine ecosystem dominated by coral organisms that produce external skeletons  
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mangrove swamp ecosystem   marine shoreline ecosystems dominated by trees that can tolerate high salt concentrations  
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abyssal ecosystem   the collection of organisms and the conditions that exist in the deep portions of the ocean  
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estuaries   marine ecosystems that consist of shallow, partially enclosed areas where freshwater enters the ocean  
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emergent plants   aquatic vegetation that is rooted on the bottom but has leaves that float on the surface or protrude above the water  
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submerged plants   aquatic vegetation that is rooted on the bottom and has leaves that stay submerged below the surface of the water  
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littoral zone   region with rooted vegetation in a freshwater ecosystem  
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limnetic zone   region that does not have rooted vegetation in a freshwater ecosystem  
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oligotrophic lakes   deep, cold, nutrient-poor lakes that are low in productivity  
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eutrophic lakes   a usually shallow, warm-water lake that is nutrient rich  
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biochemical oxygen demand (BOD)   the amount of oxygen required by microbes to degrade organic molecules in aquatic ecosystem  
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periphyton   attached organisms in freshwater streams and rivers, including algae, animals, and fungi  
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