Adaptation
Species
Life Zones
Shrublands
Plant terms
100

Blending into or imposed by its habitat

Camouflage

100

Species whose continued existence and wellbeing indicates the health of an ecosystem

Indicator species

100

The angular distance north or south of the earth's equator, measured in degrees. 

Latitude

100

Most common shrubland in the state; dense stands varying from two to seven ft. tall; dominated by big sagebrush and sand sagebrush; low elevations up to 9,000 ft. 

Sagebrush Shrublands

100

A lowland area, such as a marsh or swamp, that is saturated with moisture 

Wetland

200
Prolonged state of dormancy in which body processes and metabolism, including heart beat and breathing, slow to a point ordinarily considered near death. 

Hibernation 

200

Native to a particular region, not introduced from elsewhere

Indigenous

200

The Height above sear level

Altitude

200

A distinctive but relatively narrow belt at the mountain front in rocky areas with coarse and well drained soils approximately 5,500 to 8,500 ft. 

Montane Shrublands

200

All of an organism's role or functions in its functions in its ecological community

niche

300

To change location periodically, generally moving seasonally one region to another.

Migrate

300

Species on which many other species rely for their own continued existence and whose loss could precipitate the collapse of an entire ecosystem. 

Keystone Species

300

Occurring over the Great Plains between Approximately 3,300 and 5,500 ft. Also found in intermountain parks up to 10,000 ft.

Grasslands

300

Dominated by shrubs over a sparse understory of grasses and forbs or even bare ground between approximately 4,00 and 8,000 ft.

Semidesert shrublands

300

Never woody; reproduced by seed each year; develops in a few weeks or months.

Annual

400

Living and non-living things that interrelate in a specific physical environment. 

ecosystem 

400

Geographic area determined by its altitude and latitude; characterized by a distinct set of animals and plants. 

Life zone

400

Dense to sparse deciduous woody plants with many stems, usually under 10 ft. tall, found between the grassland and the montane life zones. 

Foothills / Shrublands

400

Mid-elevation zone of forested mountains, between approximately 8,000 and 10,000 ft. 

Montane forest

400

Tree/shrub; needle-like or scale-like leaves

Conifer

500

When a species is faced with the threat of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its historic range in the near future. 

Endangered 

500

Altitudinal limit of tree growth; the upper elevational limit of continuous sub-alpine forest of upright trees.

Timberline

500

Dry environment characterized by low-growing cushion plants above 11,500 ft.

Alpine

500

Adjacent to water, found throughout the state at all elevations to above 11,000 ft.

Riparian

500

Plant that sheds its leaves each fall

Deciduous