Unit 2.1
Unit 2.2
Unit 2.3
Unit 2.4
Unit 2.5
100

The smallest unit in the ecological hierarchy, an ______ is a single organism capable of independent survival.

Individuals

100

The ability to do work; in ecosystems, it flows through organisms.

Energy

100

The movement of carbon through the atmosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere, and lithosphere.  

Carbon Cycle

100

____  affects the amount of solar energy received, which influences temperature and daylight hours. 

Latitude

100

_____ refers to changes in community along an environmental gradient. 

Zonation

200

Non-living environmental factors (temperature, water, sunlight).

Abiotic Factors

200

A system that exchanges energy and matter with its surroundings.

Open system

200

Loss of nutrients from soil as they are washed away by water.

Leaching

200

The range of ________ that a region experiences throughout the year. _______ influences the types of organisms that can survive in a biome.

Temperature
200

Gradual change in species composition in an area over time.

Succession

300

 One species benefits, the other is unaffected.

Commensalism

300

Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transformed.

First law of thermodynamics 

300

All living organisms that participate in nutrient cycling.

Biosphere

300

Rising of cold, nutrient-rich water to the ocean surface.

Upwelling

300

First organisms to colonize an area.

Pioneer Species

400

The role of a species in an ecosystem, including how it uses resources and interacts with others.

Niche 

400

What is the 10% Rule?

Only about 10% of energy is passed to the next trophic level.

400

"Ecosystems absorb more CO₂ than they release, typically when photosynthesis outpaces respiration." 

Sink

400

Human development altering natural biome formation.

Urbanization  

400

Number of different species increases during succession.  

Species diversity  

500

Interactions like mutualism, where two species benefit from their relationship, can enhance the ability of populations to expand into new areas or thrive in existing ones.

Symbiosis

500

Measure of disorder; increases as energy is lost as heat during transfers, leading to less organized energy states in ecosystems.  

Entropy

500

Nutrient overload, especially from nitrogen and phosphorus, promotes excessive algae growth in water bodies.

 

Eutrophication

500

Continuous global ocean circulation system moving heat around Earth.  

Global conveyor belt

500

Stable, mature ecosystem with little change in species composition.

Climax community