Terms
Animals
Plants/Insects
Animal Terms
Earth Terms
100

One form of energy that gets its power from the flow of electric charges.

Electricity 

100

A process for locating distant or invisible objects (such as prey) by sound waves reflected back to the emitter (such as a bat) from the objects.

Echolocation 

100

A plant that does not have much wood and its stems are green and soft. These plants grow fast and produce flowers and many seeds in a short period of time

Herbaceous

100

Environmental factors that influences or restricts the population growth of a species (i.e. disease, food availability, shelter, space, etc.)

Limiting Factors

100

The study of the physical features of earth and its atmosphere, and of human activity there on.

Geography

200

Substances discharged into the air, such as gases from cars or smokestacks.

Emissions/Exhaust

200

An animal's characteristic walking pattern, determined by the animals shape. (ie how a wolf walks vs. how a rabbit moves).

Gait

200

An immature form of an insect, at the stage between egg and metamorphosis.

Larva

200

An organism whose presence, absence, or abundance acts as a signal, showing whether an ecosystem is healthy or not.

Indicator Species

200

The study of earth’s physical structure and substance, its history and processes.

Geology

300

When land that is usually dry is submerged by an overflow of water.

Flood/Flooding

300

The process or state of breaking or being broken into small or separate parts.

Fry

300

The timing of nature's cycles, such as the leaves changing color in the fall or the migration of a butterfly species.

Phenology

300

A species that plays a crucial role in an ecosystem, where many organisms are impacted by its presence.

Keystone Species

300

Heat from the earth; a renewable energy source.

Geothermal

400

The process or state of breaking or being broken into small or separate parts.

Fragmentation

400

An animal that eats grass or forbs in a field. 

Grazer

400

An insect in its inactive, immature form. The stage between larva and adult, also known as a chrysalis or cocoon.

Pupa

400

An invertebrate large enough to be seen without a microscope.

Macro-invertebrate 

400

Freshwater held underground in the soil, or in pores and crevices of rock. Humans pump it out by wells to supply water. Natural springs bring up and hold freshwater on the surface. Geological formations called aquifers also hold and contain groundwater.

Groundwater

500

An effect or influence.

Impact

500

An organism that houses another organism through a symbiotic relationship.

Host

500

A butterfly's tongue.

Proboscis

500

A smaller habitat within a larger one, in which environmental conditions differ from those in the larger one.

Microhabitat

500

Brightening of the night sky caused by man made light (street lights, buildings, etc.), which has a disruptive effect on natural cycles and wildlife.

Light Pollution

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