Ecosystems Interactions & Interdependency (Unit 1)
Energy & Matter (Unit 2)
The Cell & Gene Expression (Unit 3)
Urban Evolution Adaptations (Unit 4)
Ancestry & Trees (Unit 5)
100

These are the nonliving parts of an ecosystem, such as rainfall and temperature, that dictate where animals can live.


Abiotic Factors

100

These "undead" fires smolder underground in carbon-rich soil during the winter.


Zombie Fire

100

Biologically, this condition is defined as uncontrolled cell division resulting from genetic mutations


Cancer

100

In an evolutionary context, this term describes an organism’s ability to survive and produce offspring in a specific environment


Fitness 

100

This biological process involves the formation of new and distinct species through evolution

Speciation

200

The population sizes of herbivores and carnivores are primarily influenced by the availability of these two critical resources

Food and Water


200

This is the specific "soil" material in the Arctic made of partially decomposed organic matter that stores massive amounts of carbon.


Peat


200

This specific protein acts as a "guardian" by repairing DNA or triggering cell death (apoptosis) in damaged cells

p53 Protein

200

This phenomenon, often caused by man-made structures like roads, restricts movement and can reduce a population’s genetic diversity

Habitat Fragmentation 

200

Scientists determine that two groups belong to the same species if they can interbreed and produce these types of offspring

Fertile offspring 

300

This term describes the maximum number of individuals an environment can support without the ecosystem collapsing

Carrying Capacity 

300

This biological process supports life after a fire by transforming light energy into chemical energy, forming the basis of the food web

Photosynthesis 


300

If these specific types of errors during DNA replication are not fixed, they are passed on as mutations to daughter cells


Mutations

300

Natural selection requires variation in traits that can be inherited and that directly affect an organism's chances of these two things

Survival and Reproduction 

300

This type of evidence is used to show common ancestry, as more closely related species share more similar sequences

DNA sequences 

400

When water availability decreases in the Serengeti, this specific biological group is the first to decline, causing a "bottom-up" crash.


Producers

400

This chemical process rearranges matter from organic plant tissue into CO2 gas and heat energy (and light energy).


Combustion 

400

For a mutation to be passed down to offspring and potentially affect future generations, it must occur in these specialized cells

Germ Cells (sperm/egg)


400

This modern process acts as a selective pressure by introducing new environmental factors like light pollution, noise, and heat

Urbanization 

400

On a phylogenetic tree, this specific feature represents a common ancestor shared by two different lineages

Branching Points (node)

500

This type of species, like the wildebeest, has an outsized impact on its environment; if removed, the entire food web may collapse.


Keystone Species

500

This modern human activity increases global temperatures and creates drier conditions, leading to more frequent and intense wildfires


Burning Fossil Fuels

500

A mutation in this specific gene leads to cancer because it prevents the protein from halting the cell cycle to monitor DNA integrity at checkpoints

p53 gene

500

If a specific trait provides a survival advantage, natural selection leads to this change in the population over generations

Increase in trait frequency 

500

Rapid climate change poses a major risk to specialized species like polar bears because they may not be able to adapt or migrate fast enough to avoid this

Extinction 

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