Evolution
5.1
Species Interactions
5.2
Ecological Communities 5.3
Community Stability
5.4
Good to know
100

The process by which traitsthat improve an organism’s chances for survival and repro-duction are passed on more frequently to future generationsthan those that do not.

Natural Selection

100

A relationship in which two or more species benefit

mutualism

100

A species that has strong or wide reaching impact on a community.

keystone species

100

 A disturbance, such as a fire, logging, or farming,dramatically alters an existing community but does not destroy all livingthings or all organic matter in the soil.

secondary sucession

100

Animals gathering around a water hole in a drought-prone area and establishing hierarchies of access to the water is an example of competition.

True.

200

Biological evolution that occurs by chance.

genetic drift

200

The use of resources and its functional role in a community.

niche.

200

A rank in a feeding hierarchy.

(Primary producers always make up a community’s first level. Primary, secondary, and tertiary consumers make up the second, third, and fourth levels. In theory, a community can have any number of  levels) 

trophic level

200

 A nonnative organism that spreads widely in a community causing disturbance and a major problem in many parts of the world.

invasive species

200

In a mass extinction, the rate of extinction exceeds




the rate of background extinction.

300

The process by which new species are generated.

speciation.

300

A long-lasting and physically close relationship in which at least one organism benefits.

symbiosis

300

The process by which organismsuse oxygen to release the chemical energy of sugars such asglucose, releasing carbon dioxide and water as a byproduct.

Cellular Respiration

300

A community is built essentially from scratch.  It takes place after a bare expanse of rock, sand, or sediment is exposed for the first time. This can occur when glaciers retreat, lakes dry up, or volcanic lava or ash spreads across the landscape

primary sucession

300

In the history of the world, how many mass extinctions have occurred?




5

400

The disappearance of a species from Earth.

extinction

400

The process bywhich two species evolve in response to changes in each other. A changein one species, therefore, is usually followed by a change in the other

Coevolution

400

The total amount of living tissue it contains

biomass

400

A community experiences a somewhat predictable series of changes over time.

sucession
400

A niche restricted by competition is a

realized niche.

500

A heritable trait that increases an individual’s fitness

adaptation.

500

When species compete, they tend to divide resources. Many types of birds—including the wood peckers, creeper, and nuthatch shown here—feed on insects from tree trunks. By each specializing in particular insects on particular parts of the tree, the birds minimize competition.

Resource Partitioning

500

A visual map of feeding relationships and energy flow, showing the many paths by which energy and nutrients pass among organisms as they consume one another.

food web

500

Species that colonizethe newly exposed land first

pioneer species

500

Two species of finch live in the same environment. Over time, one develops a larger beak to consume larger seeds, while the other develops a narrow beak to consume more delicate seeds. This is an example of

Character Displacement