Atmosphere and Climate
Ocean Currents
Climate Patterns and ENSO
Biomes and Marine Ecosystems
Ecological Succession and Biodiversity
100

This layer of the atmosphere contains all weather.

Troposphere

100

Large circular surface currents are known as these.

Gyres

100

This term describes long-term average weather patterns over a large region.

Climate

100

These two factors primarily determine biome distribution.

Temperature and precipitation

100

The first organisms to colonize bare rock are called these.

Pioneer species

200

This term describes short-term atmospheric conditions in a local area.

Weather

200

Cold, nutrient-rich water rising to the surface is called this.

Upwelling

200

This oscillation involves periodic warming of Pacific Ocean waters near Peru.

El Niño

200

This zone in oceans receives enough light for photosynthesis.

Euphotic zones

200

This type of succession occurs when soil is already present after a disturbance.

Secondary succession

300

This effect describes how Earth’s rotation deflects winds and ocean currents.

Coriolis Effect

300

Cold, nutrient-rich water rising to the surface is called this.

Thermohaline circulation

300

During this phase, trade winds are stronger and effects are opposite of El Niño.

La Niña

300

This type of biome includes estuaries, wetlands, and coral reefs.

Aquatic biomes

300

This is the stable, mature end stage of ecological succession.

Climax community

400

These pressure-driven movements redistribute heat and create wind patterns.

Convection currents

400

Warm water flows along these coasts of continents, generally warming nearby land.

East coasts

400

This happens when El Niño weakens upwelling, harming fisheries off South America.

Decreased nutrient supply (or collapse of fisheries)

400

This biome has the highest biomass and very high rainfall, often found in coastal regions.

Temperate rainforest

400

This term describes changes in ecosystems across space, like altitude or latitude.

Zonation

500

This phenomenon occurs when air rises over mountains, cools, and causes precipitation on one side.

Orographic precipitation

500

This major current helps keep northwestern Europe warmer than expected for its latitude.

Gulf Stream (or North Atlantic Drift)

500

This global effect of ENSO includes shifting jet streams and causing droughts or floods worldwide.

Alteration of global weather patterns

500

These microscopic organisms form the base of marine food webs.

Phytoplankton

500

Species with this characteristic are especially vulnerable to extinction due to limited habitat.

A limited geographic range (or being endemic)