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All the parts of the planet that are inhabited by living things. – Includes both the atmosphere and the soil; the sum of all the earths ecosystems. |
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A community of living things and the non-living features of the environment needed for their survival. |
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Anything that can independently carry out life processes. – A living thing. |
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A membrane-bound structure that is the basic unit of life. |
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Deoxyribonucleic acid; the hereditary material that controls all the activities of a cell, contains the information to make new cells, and provides instructions for making proteins. |
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A segment of DNA that carries the hereditary instructions for producing a protein. – The basic unit of hereditary information. |
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An organism that makes its own food using the energy in light (photosynthesis) or a chemical reaction (chemosynthesis). – Green plants and some bacteria are examples. |
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An organism that must eat other living things to provide its food energy. – All animals are examples. |
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A type of consumer that breaks down waste and/or dead organisms to provide its food energy. – Fungi, bacteria, and scavangers are examples. |
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A map of energy flow that shows what organisms eat what in an ecosystem. |
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A more complete map of energy flow that shows all of the various food chains in an ecosystem and how they are related. |
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The distribution of individuals among different ages in a population. |
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• The number of births occurring in a period of time (most often a year). |
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• The number of individuals of a species that an ecosystem is capable of supporting for a long period of time. |
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Death Rate or Mortality Rate |
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The number of deaths occurring in a population during period of time. |
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• A limiting factor whose effect is related to the density of a population. • The higher the population density, the more strongly this factor limits population growth. – Examples include availability of food, nesting sites and other resources used by the population. |
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Density-independent Factor |
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• A variable that affects population size regardless of population density – Examples include fire, flood, drought and other natural phenomena |
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• The spatial distribution of individuals in a population – May be described as even, clumped, or random. |
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• The movement of individuals out of a population. • This decreases the population of an area without altering the death rate. |
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• The movement of individuals into a population. • This increases the population without the birth of new individuals. |
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• How long, on average, an individual is expected to live |
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• The number of individuals in a population in a given area at a specific time. • A measure of how crowded the population is. |
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• The graph of a species’ mortality-rate data distributed over the age of the individuals who die. |
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The scientific study of the interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment. |
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Any living part of an ecosystem. |
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Any nonliving component of an ecosystem. –Includes both the physical and chemical features of the environment. |
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A group of organisms of the same species living in the same area at the same time. |
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All the populations of organisms living in an area. |
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The specific environment in which an organism lives with all its characteristic abiotic and biotic factors. |
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The average seasonal weather conditions for a given location. – Includes average high and low temperatures, precipitation, and solar radiation |
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A climate in a specific area that differs significantly from the climate of the surrounding region. |
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A major type of terrestrial (land) ecosystem. |
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Forest ecosystem near the equator that receives as much as 250 cm of rainfall yearly. |
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Grassland with scattered trees found in tropical regions. – These regions have a warm climate with alternating wet and dry seasons. |
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Land area that receives less than 30 cm of rain a year. –Climate may be hot, temperate, or even polar. |
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A temperate, coastal ecosystem dominated by dense evergreen shrubs. – Climate consists of mild, rainy winters and hot dry summers. |
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Ecosystem built on deep nutrient- rich soil that supports a wide variety of grasses. – Growth of woody shrubs and trees is prevented by drought, occasional fires, and the grazing of large animals. |
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A forest ecosystem in a temperate region characterized by trees and shrubs that drop their leaves each winter. |
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A forest ecosystem dominated by cone-bearing evergreen trees, mostly found in northern latitudes. – Trees are adapted to long cold winters with heavy snow. |
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An ecosystem found above the arctic circle or on high mountains characterized by extreme cold, frozen sub-soil, and high winds. – Plant communities are dominated by mosses and grasses. |
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Permanently frozen sub-soil. |
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