Water
Cycles
Food Web
Environment
Aspects of a Community
100

Closest to shore, exposed to air at low tide and covered by water at high tide.

Intertidal Zone

100

moves between the atmosphere, land, and oceans through processes like evaporation, transpiration, condensation, and precipitation.

Water Cycle

100

Outcome when one species is removed from or added to a specific food web

Disruption of energy flow and nutrients 

100

a group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area at the same time and interact with each other

Population

100

When two or more species require the same limited resources.

Competition
200

Water over the continental shelf

Neritic Zone

200

This cycle involves the conversion of atmospheric nitrogen gas into usable forms like nitrates by bacteria (nitrogen fixation). These nitrates are then used by plants, and the nitrogen returns to the atmosphere through denitrifying bacteria

Nitrogen Cycle

200

the 10% rule of energy transfer

Only about 10% of the energy from one level is transferred to the next

200

a group of different species living and interacting within a specific area or habitat

Community

200

When one species hunts and kills another for food.

Predation

300

The deep, open ocean beyond the continental shelf.

Oceanic Zone

300

typically starting as sunlight and ending as heat lost to the environment.

"Energy Flow" Cycle

300

Energy available at the primary consumer level if there is 5 Kcal available at the tertiary consumer level

500 Kcal

300

the specific natural environment or place where a particular plant, animal, or other organism lives, grows, and thrives, providing the necessary food, shelter, water, and space for its survival and reproduction

Habitat

300

When one species benefits at the expense of another  

Parasitism

400

Open well-lit area of a lake or pond where sunlight penetrates deeply enough for photosynthesis to occur

Limnetic zone

400

mainly cycles through water, soil, and rocks, with plants taking up phosphate salts from weathered rock and soil. It is a slow cycle, often limited by the availability of ____________, which is a key nutrient for life

Phosphorus Cycle

400

Energy available at the producer level if there is 30 Kcal available at the tertiary consumer level

30,000 Kcal

400

These are the non-living components of the environment that a species requires, such as temperature, water, sunlight, and soil type.

DOUBLE BONUS POINTS!!

Abiotic Factors

400

A relationship where both species benefit.

Mutualism

500

water held underground in the soil or in pores and crevices in rock, forming a vital source of freshwater for drinking, agriculture, and ecosystems

ground water

500

cycles between the atmosphere, oceans, land, and living organisms through processes such as photosynthesis, respiration, decomposition, and combustion

Carbon Cycle

500

Energy available at the tertiary consumer level if there is 4000 Kcal available at the producer level

4 Kcal

500

the role and position a species occupies within an ecosystem, encompassing the physical and environmental conditions it needs to survive and reproduce, as well as its interactions with other species and the environment

Niche

500

A relationship where one species benefits and the other is neither harmed nor helped.

Commensalism