Science!
Evolution
Population Ecology
Species Interactions/Community Ecology
Species Interactions/Community Ecology
100

This is the technique used for testing ideas with observations, and generally consists of six different steps.

What is the Scientific Method?

100

These are accidental changes in DNA which give rise to genetic variation among individuals.

What are mutations?

100

This term describes the maximum number of individuals an environment can support over time.

What is carrying capacity.

100

This is the ecological term for one organism hunting and consuming another.

Predation

100

This is an introduced species that has unregulated population growth due to an absence of limiting factors.

Invasive species

200

This footprint expresses the cumulative area of biologically productive land and water required to provide the resources a person/population consumes and to dispose of or recycle the waste the person/population produces.


Ecological footprint

200

This  occurs when very unrelated species living in similar environments in separate locations independently acquire similar traits as they adapt to similar selective pressures.

Convergent Evolution

200

This type of population growth occurs when resources are unlimited and the population grows rapidly.

What is exponential?

200

This kind of symbiotic relationship benefits one organism while harming the other.

Parasitism
200

This type of succession commonly occurs after a forest fire.

What is secondary succession?

300

This step of the scientific method involves making an educated, testable prediction based on observations and prior knowledge.

What is a hypothesis?

300

An individual being better suited to their environment than others is one part of this process.

Natural selection

300

Humans follow this type of survivor ship curve.

Type I

300

These cause disease in their hosts.

Parasites

300

This type of succession follows a disturbance so severe that no vegetation or soil life remains from the community that had occupied the site.

Primary succession

400

These are the two phenomena that triggered a remarkable increase in population growth.

Agricultural & Industrial Revolutions

400

From yellow labs to corgis, all modern dog breeds are descendants of a single species, Canis lupus. This is was achieved through:

Artificial selection

400

This describes the relative numbers of individuals of different ages within a population.

Age structure

400

These break down leaf litter and other nonliving matter into simpler constituents that can be taken up and used by plants.

Decomposers

400

This is a type of species that exerts great influence on a community's composition and structure.

Keystone species

500

This experiment is one in which the scientist manipulates variables or conditions that change.

Controlled experiment

500

This term describes the total number of different species in a given area.

What is species richness?

500
A population's growth rate is determined by these four factors.

Natality, mortality, immigration, emigration

500

This relationship occurs when two species evolve in response to each other.

What is coevolution?

500

These are the first organisms to colonize a barren area.

What are pioneer species?

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