Ecosystems
Biodiversity
Populations
Earth Systems and Resources
Land and Water Use
100

the process by which plants and algae use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen

photosynthesis


100

species that can live under a wide range of biotic or abiotic conditions

generalists

100

the limit to the number of individuals that can be supported by an existing habitat or ecosystem, an dis denoted as K

carrying capacity

100

the theory that the lithosphere of Earth is divided into plates, most of which are in constant motion

plate tectonics

100

the tendency of a shared, limited resource to become depleted if it is not regulated in some way

tragedy of the commons

200

an interaction in which one animal typically kills and consumes another animal

predation

200

the processes by which life-supporting resources such as clean water, timber, fisheries, and agricultural crops are produced

ecosystem services

200

a visual representation of the number of individuals within specific age groups for a country, typically expressed for males and females

age structure diagram

200

the breakdown of rocks and minerals by chemical reactions, the dissolving of chemical elements from rocks, or both of these processes

chemical weathering

200

a form of soil degradation that occurs when soil remains under water for prolonged periods

waterlogging

300

represents Earth's most diverse marine biome, and are found in warm, shallow waters beyond the shoreline in tropical regions

coral reef

300

the suite of abiotic conditions under which a species can survive, grow, and reproduce (also known as fundamental niche)

ecological tolerance

300

total fertility rate required to offset the average number of deaths in a population in order to maintain the current population size

replacement-level fertility

300

all the land in an area that drains into a particular stream, river, lake or wetland

watershed

300

the process by which water from precipitation percolates through the soil into groundwater

groundwater recharge

400

the conversion of ammonia into nitrite and then into nitrate

nitrification

400

a disruption occurring regularly, such as the cycles of day and night or the daily and monthly cycles of the moon's effect on ocean tides

periodic disruption

400

a conceptual representation of the three major factors that influence environmental impact - population of humans, affluence, technology

IPAT equation

400

the latitude that receives the most intense sunlight, which causes the ascending branches of the two Hadley cells to converge

Intertropical convergence zone

400

a trait possessed by certain individuals that are exposed to a pesticide and survive

pesticide resistance

500

of the total biomass available at a given trophic level, only about 10 percent can be converted into energy at the next higher trophic level

10% rule

500

a species that demonstrates a particular characteristic of an ecosystem

indicator species

500

a method that dictates that by dividing the number 70 by the percentage population growth rate, we can determine a population's doubling time

rule of 70

500

a region with dry conditions found on the leeward side of a mountain range as a result of humid winds form the ocean causing precipitation on the windward side

rain shadow

500

the largest quantity of a renewable resource that can be harvested indefinitely

maximum sustainable yield