Levels of Organization
Ecological Details
Interactions
Interactions Again
Ecosystem Disruptions
Ecosystem Disruptions and Biodiversity
100

An individual living thing, whether a bacterium, zebra, tree or anything else that is alive, is considered an _________.

 organism

100

All of the biotic and abiotic things that interact within a particular area.

ecosystem
100

Organisms that cannot make their own food

Consumers or heterotrophs

100

The place in which an organism lives 

Habitat 

100

What does anthropogenic environmental change mean? 

human-caused changes to the environment

100

Slow and steady population growth that tends to occur in stable ecosystems. 

logistic growth

200

A very large ecosystem or series of connected ecosystems that have a similar climate and similar dominant plant and animal life. For example: deserts, tundra and tropical rainforests.

biome

200

Anything that restricts the number of individuals in a population. For example, predators or the amount of water present

Limiting factor 

200

Any long term, close relationship between different species 

Symbiosis 

200

This is the name given to a species whose niche and behavior is especially important to the overall health and stability of their ecosystem. 

keystone species

200

This major historical period occurred about 250 years ago. Humans started to use machines and fossil fuel power to greatly increase their productivity. The use of natural resources and creation of waste greatly increased as a result. 

The Industrial Revolution

200

The burning of fossil fuels contributes directly to this major category of anthropogenic change to the environment. 

climate change/global warming

300

All the organism in an ecosystem that belong to the same species 

Population 

300

The largest number of individuals of one species that an ecosystem can support over time

Carrying capacity 

300

A symbiotic relationship in which both species benefit 

Mutualism 
300

How an organism survives, including its habitat, how it obtains food and shelter, and how it avoids danger.

ecological niche

300

1. Identify a nonrenewable resource.

2. Identify a renewable resource.

1. coal, oil, natural gas, uranium 

2. solar, wind, geothermal, hydroelectric power

300

Invasive species often experience this type of population growth since they have significant advantages over the native species in their new ecosystem. 

exponential population growth

400

Different populations interacting in a particular area

Community 

400

The study of interactions that occur among organisms and their environment

Ecology 

400

A symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits and the other is not affected 

Commensalism 

400

The name given to the first species to return to an ecosystem after a disturbance

pioneer species 

400

What commonly consumed product causes the most environmental problems?

meat, specifically beef
400

This ecosystem service provides us with many of the resources we need to survive. Food, oxygen and wood are all examples of this type of ecosystem service. 

provisioning services
500

All of the water on Earth

hydrosphere

500

Organisms that use an outside energy source, such as the sun, to make their own food

Producers or autotrophs

500

A symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits but the other is harmed 

Parasitism 

500

This is the name given to an ecosystem's most stable and biodiverse form

climax community

500

The name given to ecosystems recovering from a disturbance that still have soil present

Secondary succession
500

This term refers to all of the resources a person, corporation or country uses, as well as all of the waste that they generate. It is measured in the amount of land required to produce their resources and contain their waste. 

ecological footprint

600

All life on Earth

the biosphere

600

Why are there usually less apex predators than producers in every ecosystem? 

Because energy decreases as it moves up food chains so there is less energy to support large predator populations

600

This interaction occurs when different species divide up resources within their ecosystem rather than competing with each other.    

niche partitioning

600

A type of interaction in which one species affects multiple trophic levels within its ecosystem. For example, the presence of wolves in Yellowstone National Park affects every trophic level within the park. 

trophic cascade

600

Which major category of anthropogenic environmental change has lead some scientists to claim that a sixth mass extinction is currently going on?

habitat destruction

600

Why are  biodiverse ecosystems more stable and resilient? 

Because they contain more options in the form of different species, traits, processes, niches, habitats, etc. Some of these can respond effectively to environmental changes. 

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