Evolution
Species Interactions
Ecological Communities
Community Stability
Miscellaneous
100

in general terms, change over time

evolution

100

an organism’s habitat, resource use, and fundamental role in a community

niche

100

an organism that can capture energy from the sun or from chemicals and store it; also called autotroph

primary producer

100

a somewhat predictable series of changes over time in a community

succession

100

a heritable trait that increases the likelihood of an individual’s survival and reproduction

adaptation

200

the process by which traits that improve an organism’s chances for survival and reproduction are passed on more frequently to offspring than those that do not

natural selection

200

the process by which individuals of one species (the predators) hunt, capture, and feed on individuals of another species (the prey)

predation

200

the process by which organisms use oxygen to release the chemical energy of sugars, producing carbon dioxide and water

cellular respiration

200

the somewhat predictable series of changes in a community that follows a disturbance so severe that no vegetation or soil life remains

primary succession

200

biological evolution that occurs by chance

genetic drift

300

the degree to which an organism can reproduce successfully in its environment

fitness

300

a long-term and physically close relationship between two organisms from different species in which at least one organism benefits; commensalism, mutualism, and parasitism are all symbiotic relationships

symbiosis

300

animal that kills and eats other animals

carnivore

300

a nonnative species that spreads widely in a community

invasive species

300

a species that has a strong or wide-ranging impact on a community

keystone species

400

a sequence of DNA that codes for a particular trait

gene

400

a relationship between two organisms from different species in which one organism (the parasite) depends on the other (the host) for nourishment or some other benefit

parasitism

400

a linear series of feeding relationships

food chain

400

the somewhat predictable series of changes in a community that follows a disturbance (e.g., a fire, logging, or farming) that dramatically alters the community but does not destroy all vegetation or soil life

secondary succession

400

a relationship between two organisms from different species in which one benefits and the other is unaffected

commensalism

500

the process by which new species are generated

speciation

500

the process by which two species evolve in response to changes in each other

coevolution

500

the process by which bacteria use energy stored in bonds of hydrogen sulfide to convert carbon dioxide and water into sugars

chemosynthesis

500

one of the first species to colonize newly exposed land

pioneer species

500

an organism (e.g., a millipede or soil insect) that scavenges the waste products or dead bodies of other community members

detritivore

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