Ecology Word Scramble
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Term | Definition |
Ecology | study of the interactions of organisms with their envrionment |
Biosphere | composed of living commumites and nonliving physical and chemical factors / global ecosystem/ supports life |
Autotrophs | plants on land that use photosynthesis and can also be called producers ( also bacteria) |
Photoautotrophs | capture energy from the sun to make organic compounds through photosynthesis |
Chemoautotrophs | capture energy from chemicals to make organic compounds through chemosynthesis |
Heterotrophs | primary consumers, eat autotrophs, cannot make their own food |
Detritivores and Decomposers | recieve energy from dead matter and wastes |
Cellular repiration | auto. and hetero. carry out chemical reactions that release chemical energy in organic compounds |
Food chain | describe eating realationships or transfer of energy in one direction between organisms in an ecosystem |
Food webs | a network of interconnecting food chains |
Habitat | where particular organisms live |
10% rule | each trophic level reaches ammmount 10% of the energy from the level below it |
trophic structure | autotrophs, heterotrophs, hervivores, omnivores, carnivores |
Biomass | the total quantity or mass of organisms in an are or volume |
predation | a +/- interaction between two species in which one species eats the other |
niche | a particular combination of resourses that species is adopted to exploit |
symbiosis | living together in a long-term relationship with significant physical or chemical interactions |
Mutualism | both species benefit +/+ |
Parasitism | one organism benefits at the others expense +/- |
Commensalism | one organism benefits and the other is unaffected +/o |
Competiiton | larger or stornger organism excludes a smaller or weaker one form living space or deprives it from food |
Behavior | an organisms conducts or the way it acts. affects the availablity of an individual organism to survive and reproduce |
Inate behaviors | anything influnced by genes, not based on expeierence |
Response | an organisms reaction to stimilus |
Stimiulus | anything that trigers behaivors |
Learned beheivors | develops as a result of experience |
Conditioning | one stimulus is associated with another unrelated stimulus |
Animal Societies | complex social group organized by genetically determined behavior patterns |
population density | the number of individuals per unit of land or area or water volume |
productivity | how fast more biomass is added to an ecosystem |
limiting factors | it determines how quickly biomass is added to an ecosystem and can be biotic or abiotic |
Expontential growth | growth by multiplying cells and quickly rising and then falling |
Carrying Capacity | largest popualtion of a species the environment can support and is always in logistic growth |
Logistic Growth | when the population keeps growing and eventually becomes stable |
Ecosystem | all the organisms in a community as well as the abiotic environment |
Succession | one type of communty repalces another |
Climax Community | complex relationships now exist in the community and it has reached a stable balance |
Primary Succession | begins on bare rock glacial deposits lake beds |
Secondary Succession | occurs in a disturbed site where soil is already present lake and abandoned field, forest fire, etc |
common pool resources | goods and services provided by ecosystems that can be used by everyone |
Sustainable | means we can continue to use ecosystem goods and services without ruining them for future generations |
pollution | harming human and animal health, creates acid rain which prevents forest from growing and affects aquatic life |
biodiversity | the variety of life in a world or particular habitat or ecosystem |
greenhouse gasses pros | they trap heat in the atmosphere. w/o them the earth would be too cool to sustain life |
greenhouse gasses cons | there is too much heat increasein our global climate = global warming |
what are the levels of organization an ecologist can study in order | organism, population, community, ecosystem |
what makes up a population | all the same organism in a species |
what makes up a community | different organisms of different species in an ecosystem |
what makes up an ecosystem | biotic and abiotic factors |
ways organisms use energy | to car out chemical reactions, move, and transport nutrients to build complex molecules for cells |
chemical energy vs free energy | free is available for work while chemical energy is formed and stored in organic molecules |
autotrophs get their energy by | photosynthesis and chemosynthesis |
how do heterotrophs obtain their energy | from other organisms, heterotrophs are carnivores, herbivores or omnivores. |
what is a tropic level | organism that share the same function in the food chain and same nutritional relationship to the primary sources of energy |
trophic levels in order from bottom to top | producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, Tertiary consumers, Quaternary consumers |
which tropic level contains the most biomass | produces because they obtain the most energy |
competitive exclusion principle | states that two spices cannot occupy the same niche in the same ecosystem for a long period of time |
benefits to an animal society | defense form predators, reproduction, group care of young, diffusion of labor, sharing of useful information |
dominance hierarchy | where animals in a group have certain individual dominance over others like gorillas or wolves |
caste system | leadership is determined by body type and genetics like bees and termites |
biochemical cycle | it cycles the chemicals between organisms and the earth |
3 processes that release co2 into the atmosphere | cellular respiration, decomposition, combustion |
role of photosynthesis in carbon cycle | allows plants to give off o2 which primary consumers use and take co2 out of the atmosphere |
consequences of climate change | rise in sea levels, damage to coastal cities, agricultural impacts, human health inputs due to air quality |
renewable vs nonrenewable | can be replenished(solar energy, air) verses things with a limited supply(coal, oil) |
difference between primary and secondary succession | primary takes longer and primary starts with less resources |
what happens to nitrogen before animal and plant use | it is fixed through nitrogen fixation caried out usually by bacteria and cyonobacteria |
water cycle | processes by which water circulates between earth's oceans, land, and atmosphere |
condensation | the conversion of gas to water |
plant transpiration | water movement through plant and evaporation from leaves stems and flowers |
infiltration | water on ground enters the surface soil |
solar radiation | radiant energy emitted b the sun in electromagnetic energy |
evaporation | type of vaporization from liquid into gas |
Created by:
emassmann
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