AP Biology 40.4-43

studied byStudied by 19 people
4.0(1)
learn
LearnA personalized and smart learning plan
exam
Practice TestTake a test on your terms and definitions
spaced repetition
Spaced RepetitionScientifically backed study method
heart puzzle
Matching GameHow quick can you match all your cards?
flashcards
FlashcardsStudy terms and definitions

1 / 67

flashcard set

Earn XP

Description and Tags

68 Terms

1
climate
The long-term prevailing weather conditions at a given place.
New cards
2
abiotic
Nonliving; referring to the physical and chemical properties of an environment.
New cards
3
biotic
Pertaining to the living factors—the organisms—in an environment.
New cards
4
biomes
Any of the world's major ecosystem types, often classified by temperature and precipitation
New cards
5
disturbance
A natural or human-caused event that changes a biological community and usually removes organisms from it. Disturbances, such as fires and storms, play a pivotal role in structuring many communities.
New cards
6
thermocline
A narrow stratum of abrupt temperature change in the ocean and in many temperate-zone lakes.
New cards
7
dispersal
The movement of individuals or gametes away from their parent location. This movement sometimes expands the geographic range of a population or species.
New cards
8
tropical forest
A terrestrial biome characterized by relatively high precipitation and temperatures year-round.
New cards
9
savanna
A tropical grassland biome with scattered individual trees and large herbivores and maintained by occasional fires and drought.
New cards
10
desert
A terrestrial biome characterized by very low precipitation.
New cards
11
chaparral
A biome characterized by mild, rainy winters and long, hot, dry summers; dominated by dense, spiny evergreen shrubs
New cards
12
temperate grassland
A terrestrial biome that exists at midlatitude regions and is dominated by grasses and forbs.
New cards
13
temperate broadleaf forest
A biome located throughout midlatitude regions where there is sufficient moisture to support the growth of large, broadleaf deciduous trees.
New cards
14
northern coniferous forest
A terrestrial biome characterized by long, cold winters and dominated by cone-bearing trees.
New cards
15
tundra
A terrestrial biome at the extreme limits of plant growth. At the northernmost limits, it is called arctic tundra, and at high altitudes, where plant forms are limited to low shrubby or matlike vegetation, it is called alpine tundra.
New cards
16
density
The number of individuals per unit area or volume.
New cards
17
survivorship curves
A plot of the number of members of a cohort that are still alive at each age; one way to represent age-specific mortality.
New cards
18
exponential growth
Growth of a population in an ideal, unlimited environment, represented by a J-shaped curve when population size is plotted over time.
New cards
19
logistic growth
Population growth that levels off as population size approaches carrying capacity.
New cards
20
carrying capacity
The maximum population size that can be supported by the available resources, symbolized as K.
New cards
21
density dependent
Referring to any characteristic that varies with population density.
New cards
22
density independent
Referring to any characteristic that is not affected by population density.
New cards
23
K-selection
Selection for life history traits that are sensitive to population density; also called density-dependent selection.
New cards
24
r-selection
Selection for life history traits that maximize reproductive success in uncrowded environments; also called density-independent selection.
New cards
25
ecological footprint
The aggregate land and water area required by a person, city, or nation to produce all of the resources it consumes and to absorb all of the wastes it generates.
New cards
26
ecological succession
Transition in the species composition of a community following a disturbance; establishment of a community in an area virtually barren of life.
New cards
27
life history
The traits that affect an organism's schedule of reproduction and survival.
New cards
28
interspecific interaction
A relationship between individuals of two or more species in a community.
New cards
29
competition
Competition for resources between individuals of two or more species when resources are in short supply.
New cards
30
predation
An interaction between species in which one species, the predator, eats the other, the prey.
New cards
31
herbivory
An interaction in which an organism eats parts of a plant or alga.
New cards
32
symbiosis
An ecological relationship between organisms of two different species that live together in direct and intimate contact.
New cards
33
parasitism
A symbiotic relationship in which one organism, the parasite, benefits at the expense of another, the host, by living either within or on the host.
New cards
34
mutualism
A symbiotic relationship in which both participants benefit.
New cards
35
commensualism
A symbiotic relationship in which one organism benefits but the other is neither helped nor harmed.
New cards
36
facilitation
An interaction in which one species has a positive effect on the survival and reproduction of another species without the intimate association of a symbiosis.
New cards
37
competitive exclusion
The concept that when populations of two similar species compete for the same limited resources, one population will use the resources more efficiently and have a reproductive advantage that will eventually lead to the elimination of the other population.
New cards
38
resource partitioning
The division of environmental resources by coexisting species such that the niche of each species differs by one or more significant factors from the niches of all coexisting species.
New cards
39
niche
The sum of a species' use of the biotic and abiotic resources in its environment.
New cards
40
species diversity
The number and relative abundance of species in a biological community.
New cards
41
biomass
The total mass of organic matter comprising a group of organisms in a particular habitat.
New cards
42
trophic structure
The different feeding relationships in an ecosystem, which determine the route of energy flow and the pattern of chemical cycling.
New cards
43
food chain
The pathway along which food energy is transferred from trophic level to trophic level, beginning with producers.
New cards
44
food web
The interconnected feeding relationships in an ecosystem.
New cards
45
dominant species
A species with substantially higher abundance or biomass than other species in a community. Dominant species exert a powerful control over the occurrence and distribution of other species.
New cards
46
keystone species
Species having a disproportionate effect on the ecosystem
New cards
47
primary succession
A type of ecological succession that occurs in an area where there were originally no organisms present and where soil has not yet formed.
New cards
48
secondary succession
A type of succession that occurs where an existing community has been cleared by some disturbance that leaves the soil or substrate intact.
New cards
49
species-area curve
The biodiversity pattern that shows that the larger the geographic area of a community is, the more species it has.
New cards
50
pathogen
An organism, virus, viroid, or prion that causes disease.
New cards
51
ecosystem
All the organisms in a given area as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact; one or more communities and the physical environment around them.
New cards
52
law of conservation of mass
A physical law stating that matter can change form but cannot be created or destroyed. In a closed system, the mass of the system is constant.
New cards
53
primary production
The amount of light energy converted to chemical energy (organic compounds) by the autotrophs in an ecosystem during a given time period.
New cards
54
trophic efficiency
The percentage of production transferred from one trophic level to the next.
New cards
55
nitrogen cycle
The natural process by which nitrogen, either from the atmosphere or from decomposed organic material, is converted by soil bacteria to compounds assimilated by plants. This incorporated nitrogen is then taken in by other organisms and subsequently released, acted on by bacteria, and made available again to the nonliving environment.
New cards
56
bioremediation
The use of organisms to detoxify and restore polluted and degraded ecosystems.
New cards
57
biological augmentation
An approach to restoration ecology that uses organisms to add essential materials to a degraded ecosystem.
New cards
58
biological magnification
A process in which retained substances become more concentrated at each higher trophic level in a food chain.
New cards
59
ecosystem service
A function performed by an ecosystem that directly or indirectly benefits humans.
New cards
60
introduced species
A species moved by humans, either intentionally or accidentally, from its native location to a new geographic region; also called non-native or exotic species.
New cards
61
decomposer
An organism that absorbs nutrients from nonliving organic material such as corpses, fallen plant material, and the wastes of living organisms and converts them to inorganic forms; a detritivore.
New cards
62
primary consumer
An herbivore; an organism that eats plants or other autotrophs.
New cards
63
secondary consumer
A carnivore that eats herbivores.
New cards
64
tertiary consumer
A carnivore that eats other carnivores.
New cards
65
primary producer
An autotroph, usually a photosynthetic organism. Collectively, autotrophs make up the trophic level of an ecosystem that ultimately supports all other levels.
New cards
66
eutrophication
A process by which nutrients, particularly phosphorus and nitrogen, become highly concentrated in a body of water, leading to increased growth of organisms such as algae or cyanobacteria.
New cards
67
greenhouse effect
The warming of Earth due to the atmospheric accumulation of carbon dioxide and certain other gases, which absorb reflected infrared radiation and reradiate some of it back toward Earth.
New cards
68
ozone layer
Reduces the penetration of UV radiation through the atmosphere; eroded by chlorine-containing pollutants
New cards

Explore top notes

note Note
studied byStudied by 18 people
904 days ago
5.0(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 66 people
932 days ago
5.0(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 7 people
913 days ago
5.0(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 50 people
959 days ago
5.0(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 20 people
904 days ago
5.0(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 20 people
1012 days ago
4.5(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 52 people
48 days ago
5.0(3)
note Note
studied byStudied by 84 people
758 days ago
5.0(3)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards Flashcard (126)
studied byStudied by 9 people
703 days ago
5.0(1)
flashcards Flashcard (58)
studied byStudied by 9 people
661 days ago
4.0(1)
flashcards Flashcard (60)
studied byStudied by 713 people
344 days ago
4.0(4)
flashcards Flashcard (37)
studied byStudied by 3 people
337 days ago
5.0(1)
flashcards Flashcard (140)
studied byStudied by 1 person
87 days ago
5.0(1)
flashcards Flashcard (28)
studied byStudied by 4 people
37 days ago
5.0(1)
flashcards Flashcard (23)
studied byStudied by 4 people
780 days ago
5.0(1)
flashcards Flashcard (275)
studied byStudied by 120 people
3 days ago
5.0(3)
robot