Aquatic life zones
Freshwater & estuary biomes
Carbon cycle
Water cycle
Human impacts
100

This depth zone receives enough sunlight to support photosynthesis

Photic zone

100

This unique ecosystem forms specifically where a river meets the sea

Estuary

100

Carbon is most commonly found in the atmosphere in this gaseous form

Carbon dioxide (CO2)

100

This is the term for the evaporation of water from the leaves of plants

Transpiration

100

This effect traps heat in the atmosphere due to gases like CO2 and methane

Greenhouse effect

200

These tiny, photosynthetic algae form the base of most aquatic food webs.

Phytoplankton

200

These tropical estuaries are characterized by salt-tolerant trees found in places like the Everglades

Mangrove swamp

200

This process by plants takes CO2 out of the atmosphere and converts it into sugar

Photosynthesis

200

This process occurs when water vapor cools and turns back into liquid droplets to form clouds

Condensation

200

Coal, oil, and natural gas are known as these; they take millions of years to form

Fossil fuels

300

This "permanently dark" zone is where food webs rely on falling organic matter or deep-sea vents

Aphotic zone

300

Near its source, this type of freshwater ecosystem has high oxygen but very little plant life

Rivers and streams

300

This "double-impact" human activity removes CO2-absorbing trees and releases stored carbon

Deforestation

300

This term describes water flowing downslope along the Earth's surface rather than soaking in

Runoff

300

This process of burning fossil fuels releases carbon into the air in just seconds

Combustion

400

This zone is closest to land and requires organisms to survive both air exposure and wave battering

Intertidal zone

400

These "nature's filters" purify water and prevent flooding by absorbing large amounts of water.

Freshwater wetlands

400

In the ocean, carbon combines with calcium to form this, which organisms use to build shells

Calcium carbonate

400

This phase change occurs when water moves directly from a solid (ice) to a gas (vapor)

Sublimation

400

Replacing natural landscapes with pavement reduces this process, leading to more urban flooding

Infiltration

500

Located from the low-tide mark to the continental shelf, this brightly lit area includes kelp forests

Coastal zone

500

These are the three main types of freshwater wetlands

Bogs, marshes, and swamps

500

This process involves the long-term storage of carbon as it settles at the bottom of the ocean, eventually forming limestone rock from the remains of shells and bones

Sedimentation

500

The movement of water through soil and porous or fractured rock

Percolation

500

These three nutrients often limit how much life an aquatic ecosystem can support

Oxygen, nitrogen, and phosphorus

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